I’m curious as to what you didn’t like about the TSX’s on your 2019 trip? I read the report, and you seemed happy with them. The oryx first shot wasn’t the best, hey it happens but the second dropped him. The warthog and hartebeest were one shot kills. The kudu picture shows one well placed hole, how many did it require? Also eland are known for taking a good chunk of lead, and you will find people here who recommend nothing short of a .500!Can anyone relate to this or am I just a TTSX jinx?
I used factory Vor-Tex TTSX’s (180 300 WM)on 6 plains game in Namibia 2019. The only animal I had a pass through and instant kill was a warthog at ~50 yards. All other bullets in other animals were recovered. Besides the warthog, a red heartabeast was the only other 1 shot kill.
I keep reading good things on the TTSX’s so I decided to hand load some for my 300 WM:180 @ 3060 fps. On a whitetail last November at 25 yards, the bullet looked like it separated on impact. The entry was larger than the exit and found petals inside cavity.
I was in SA this past May and decided to load regular TSX’s. (180 300 WM) 2900 fps for this trip. 5 different PG all were pass throughs all were1 shot kills except on an Impala and that was a bad shot on my part. All shots have been under 250 yards. Most between 125-200 yards.
Benefit to me is they kill nearly the same and I don’t have to pull lead fragments from meat I’m supposed to eat or cut away excess meat. I’ve also never had a Barnes bullet not expand so that’s a non-issue.For my part, I don't really see why you'd use a TSX or even a TTSX on soft skinned game, unless you're obliged to use copper (or maybe using a very high velocity cartridge).
I'm sure they'll work fine, but on species where you don't 'need' lots of straight line penetration or for the bullet to hold together, I don't see the benefit.
They're slightly more money than a basic Sierra Gameking or similar, they're no more accurate, the BC is worse, they're not likely to give the same degree of expansion to aid in decisive kills, they're no easier to source, so what's the benefit?
For heavily built animals where close ranges or suboptimal angles are likely, they're a solid choice. Buff, cats, euro boar, even heavily built stuff like Elk, absolutely.
For general deer? I don't think I'd bother.
Fair question. But first let say my 2019 hunt I used TTSX’s vs TSX this past May. What I was expecting with the TT’s were what I mostly read “pass throughs” and clean kills. I didn’t lose an animal with the TTs but with the Oryx and Kudu, the follow ups were honestly within 15 yards with Jack Russell’s on them. The follow ups put them down fast but still not passing through like most people experience. The hartebeest ran about 150 yards and skinners pulled bullet on opposite shoulder. the heart had a pencil hole dead center of it. I chalked all these up to “tough African game”. The TSX I used this year were totally opposite. Pass throughs dropping within site and i was very happy. My confusion is why I experience totally different results of what most people state with TT’s and even different results bw TT’s vs. T’s. Bad Lot? Ultimately i never lost an animal with either but was a lot less stressed on recoveries with the TSX.I’m curious as to what you didn’t like about the TSX’s on your 2019 trip? I read the report, and you seemed happy with them. The oryx first shot wasn’t the best, hey it happens but the second dropped him. The warthog and hartebeest were one shot kills. The kudu picture shows one well placed hole, how many did it require? Also eland are known for taking a good chunk of lead, and you will find people here who recommend nothing short of a .500!
Im curious what you were expecting vs what the actual results were? Did you have 50 yard follow ups or 150? We’re the bullets recovered against the far-side hide?
Im not trying to discount you’re experience, you took lovely trophies, and from your report you don’t make mention of any real issues. I would like to know more of the details, and what you didn’t like about the bullets.
Fair question. But first let say my 2019 hunt I used TTSX’s vs TSX this past May. What I was expecting with the TT’s were what I mostly read “pass throughs” and clean kills. I didn’t lose an animal with the TTs but with the Oryx and Kudu, the follow ups were honestly within 15 yards with Jack Russell’s on them. The follow ups put them down fast but still not passing through like most people experience. The hartebeest ran about 150 yards and skinners pulled bullet on opposite shoulder. the heart had a pencil hole dead center of it. I chalked all these up to “tough African game”. The TSX I used this year were totally opposite. Pass throughs dropping within site and i was very happy. My confusion is why I experience totally different results of what most people state with TT’s and even different results bw TT’s vs. T’s. Bad Lot? Ultimately i never lost an animal with either but was a lot less stressed on recoveries with the TSX.
I can tell you this, my boy used his .284 Winchester model 70 in RSA and everything he hit was hit hard. Bullet was 140 TSX at just over 3000fps chronoed. This wildybeasty took one frontal chest shot at around 90 yards and died very quickly. So much for the "armor plating" you read about.As stated it appears Barnes performs best with higher speeds. I’m wondering how it would work in 7mm08 or 280 where the velocity is a little slower