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Federal Premium Hunter 140 gr Berger Hybrid .270 Win Ammo, 20/box – P270BCH1

(9)
Caliber: .270 Win
Rounds: 20

Manufacturer: Federal
Model Number: P270BCH1
Ammo Bullet Type: Berger Hybrid
Ammo Casing Type: Nickel Plated Brass
Ammo Bullet Weight: 140 grain
Ammo Round Count: 20/Box
Caliber Multi: .270 Winchester
Muzzle Energy: 2705 lb/ft
Muzzle Velocity: 2950 fps
Application: Medium Game
Series/Collection: Premium Berger Hybrid Hunter
Ballistic Coefficient: 0.528
TS Dimensions Length: 1.283″

Blend the profile of a low-drag match bullet with a traditional hunting projectile design and you are ready to take on almost anything that walks on four legs. Federal Premium Berger hybrid hunter bullet weights have been fine-tuned to provide exceptional accuracy through factory rifles. Ballistic coefficients exceed those of comparable designs thanks to a hybrid nose design that combines tangent and secant ogive features. The bullets are loaded with our finest nickel-plated brass, Gold Medal primers and specially formulated propellant for the best consistency and reliability.

  • Hybrid tangent-secant ogive bullet design
  • High ballistic coefficient
  • Superior accuracy across a wide range of factory firearms
  • Lethal and reliable terminal performance on medium and big game
  • Loaded to tight specifications with gold medal primers, nickel-plated brass and specialized propellant

The ripper

1 year ago

I bought these for deer and elk season. They are very accurate . 1/2 moa at 200 yards. Shot my buck at 300 yards. He went down on the spot. Awesome until we were dressing him and found that the bullet only retained a portion of its wieght and fragmented badly. It did shatter a rib. They do the job but just beware they fragment

PradaSpec

1 year ago

7mm Rem Mag took my white tail at 561yds, went 20 yds and was down hard. Thanks to a high BC and the berger advantage, got it done!

Mike_123

1 year ago

Bought the 168gr .308 for long range plinking. It shoots sub half moa in an AR10 from a bench rest. Also used for white tail. Dropped a ten pointer on the spot. The wound cavity was slightly rediculous but it gets the job done. This is the most accurate factory ammo that I have ever used.

ACEVENTURANORTH

1 year ago

Usually shoot 180 grain and switched to the 168 grain. Wow what a difference in grouping. Cold or hot barrel they stay on target. Hit hard and drops them in their tracks.

kfehr89

1 year ago

Picked up a pack in 7mm mag today and went to the bush range. 3/4 MOA group out of my XBolt repeatedly.

Jimmy neutron

1 year ago

Tried this in .308 and in .300 wm. Both performed terrible. Groups were around 3 times the size of any hornady ammo. Bought it because I heard the bullets are great but honestly the accuracy is just not there. Ive talked to others that have tried it and they got similar results. I would expect more for the price.

jerbearman

1 year ago

I cannot recommend this bullet for hunting. I can recommend this bullet for target practice though! I read, and ignored, the 2 and 1 star reviews before I purchased these. I should have listened. These bullets explode inside the body cavity, causing devastating damage. I shot my deer at the 4th rib, and the lungs and heart both had tiny shrapnel holes in them, aside from the main bullet wound. There was a small exit wound, indicating a lot of the bullet mass was lost in the animal. Soft tip bullets usually leave an exit wound 2-3x the size of this one. The deer went 40 yards with minimal blood trail before expiring. Thankfully there was snow and I could track it with the terrible blood trail it left. Despite the entrance and exit wounds being nowhere near the front legs, both front legs were completely bloodshot from the shrapnel and had to be thrown away. What a waste. Why did I use these in the first place? They were incredibly accurate at the range. I achieved groups I didn't even know my rifle was capable of. It makes sense, a Berger match bullet will tend to perform very well. So, if you're looking for something with great range performance, sure I recommend these bullets. But if you're going to shoot something with it, you risk: -Losing the animal because the trauma is spread out in small little pieces instead of one gaping hole in the heart/lungs, letting it run extra distance and leaving a terrible blood trail (drops literally 1 mm big max) -Wasting good meat to the shrapnel!!!!! Stick to any expanding soft point. Nylon tip, or even the old school lead soft points will serve you better than these for hunting.

dennis K

1 year ago

These are the same bullets I used years ago when I was younger and had great success with their speed and accuracy

Justin91

1 year ago

There is no denying there are accurate, I got the 168gr 7mm rem mag for an elk hunt thinking I would be shooting at fair distance. I ended up getting one at 80 yards and both bullets exploded into tiny pieces inside the animal. I don’t know if they they would stay together at a greater distance.

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