Hyper vel .224" calibre
TedTF -
Actually, I much prefer a .224" cal wildcat of my own design.....
the .35 Rem case necked down ot .224" cal. This wildcat has a 26* shoulder; and works w/ a .308 bolt face. The " 22-35 "
I developed this .224" cal wildcat in the latter part of the 70's.
My intial trials w/a variety of factory and custom 22-250s, and my friend's
.225 Win and .220 Swift rifles; I decided tha tte only way I'd obtain the accuracy I was searching for... was to design .224" wildcat specifically taylored to my shooting needs. My custom 22-250s included one from P.O. Ackley's firm, one from an Ohio gunsmith named Meracle, a coupel of re-barrels done by Fred Sinclair; and I also shot some form Penrod and others.
22-35 performance:
From a 24" Hart SS 1-14 5-groove, I got 3,690fps w/ a load of Hornady 55 SX over 41.2gr WW760; and FED LR MAgnum MAtch primer.
I got into the 500yd club, w/ a prototype 55gr Hornady "V"-Max over
41.6gr VV160; and FED LR Magnum Match primer.
Shot from a 28" K & P SS 1-8 5-groove; I got 3,420fps w/ a load of
75"A"-Max over 40.5gr AA3100 and FED LR Match primer.
This load yielded 450ft lbs enegry @ 966yd; so would be good for a clean-kill on a groundhog @ 1,000yd.
The 22-35 I feel, is the ideal groundhog cartridge for MIDWEST groundhogs.
It would also be fine for use on rockchucks, coyotes' and so forth.
I have a letter from P.O. Ackley himself, who I once wrote; asking his opinion on my 22-35 wildcat. He responded back that it " should make a good case ". It DOES !
Case taper, base-to-shoulder dimension,shodler angle, rim diam and so forth;
are right in there w/ the more famous but no more capable 22-250 and
.220 Swift. The 22-35 is more closely akin to a 22-250AI in case capacity, w/o having to blow the shoulder out strenuously to obtain it.
My point:
You maybe to a point, where you can/should consider use of a wildcat.
Regards,
.357Mag