American Shooting Journal – August 2019

(Sean Pound) #1
74 American Shooting Journal // August 2019

bullet bulletin


not – in a straight line
along the path from
the muzzle. Spitzer
bullets, especially
today’s designs with
a long ogive, have
their center of gravity
further rearward, and
like a rear-wheel drive
car in the snow, will
tend to kick out to one
side or the other once
resistance (the animal)
is met. The famous story
about the 5.56 NATO
bullets being designed
to tumble is untrue; the
simple fact of the matter
is the FMJ spitzer bullet
tends to exit with the
heavy section (the rear
of the bullet) forward.
Keep the bullet weight
forward, and you
will see straight-line
penetration. The Trophy
Bonded Bear Claw does

The Federal
.300 Winchester
Magnum 200-grain
Trophy Bonded
Bear Claw load,
perfect for a hunter
wanting to extend
the capabilities
of his rifle while
hunting large game
in Alaska or Africa.

Federal’s .470 Nitro Express 500-grain
TBBC load, and author Phil Massaro’s
Heym Model 89B double rifle.

Massaro’s Heym double rifle certainly
likes the Federal Trophy Bonded Bear
Claw load, as this 75-yard target shows.
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