This is not loaded ammunition. You cannot fire these bullets right out of the box.
If you’re fixing on loading some mighty fine 223 Rem – or 222 Rem, or any other round that will take a .224” diameter 50 grain projectile – then we welcome you to the order a few boxes of Speer Varmint component projectiles.
This slightly lightweight .640” OAL bullet has an aerodynamically efficient spitzer (i.e. spire point) profile, as well as the jacket concentricity Speer built its name on. The Idaho manufacturer assigns it a G1 BC of .231. It is a jacketed soft point; *not* a Gold Dot, but still strong enough to deliver the controlled expansion that simultaneously maximizes internal trauma and minimizes pelt damage (sectional density: .142).
We’re sure this 50 grain JSP could take a deer or hog (so long as the right person is firing it), but its real home is inside a coyote or other smaller predator or varmint.
If you’re fixing on loading some mighty fine 223 Rem – or 222 Rem, or any other round that will take a .224” diameter 50 grain projectile – then we welcome you to the order a few boxes of Speer Varmint component projectiles.
This slightly lightweight .640” OAL bullet has an aerodynamically efficient spitzer (i.e. spire point) profile, as well as the jacket concentricity Speer built its name on. The Idaho manufacturer assigns it a G1 BC of .231. It is a jacketed soft point; *not* a Gold Dot, but still strong enough to deliver the controlled expansion that simultaneously maximizes internal trauma and minimizes pelt damage (sectional density: .142).
We’re sure this 50 grain JSP could take a deer or hog (so long as the right person is firing it), but its real home is inside a coyote or other smaller predator or varmint.
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