Nosler Trophy Grade Long Range ammunition is manufactured to Nosler's strictest quality standards. Nosler uses their own NoslerCustom Brass and Nosler Bullets to attain optimal performance, under any and all conditions.
AccuBond Long Range bullets from Nosler rival even the best hand loads. The high performance boat tail design polymer tip and bonded core produces the extreme performance hunters and shooters have been searching for. They are the flattest shooting sleekest bonded core hunting round ever constructed.
Some bullets fly far and some bullets expand well but only one bullet offers reliable expansion at short and long range while displaying high ballistic coefficient for a perfectly true flight. The gilded alloy jacket offers insignificant fouling over a pure copper alternative which means more reliable accuracy. The Nosler AccuBond offers reliability and accuracy, near or far.
Case Length Checked
Necks Sized, Chamfered and Trued
Flash Holes Alignment Checked
Meticulously Weighed Powder Charges
Visually Inspected Finished Rounds
High Performance Powder and Bullet Combination
Nosler Brass Cases
Nosler Trophy Grade Long Range 60102
.30-06 Springfield
168 Grain AccuBond Bullet
Polymer Tip
Barrel Twist 1:10
Velocity at Muzzle: 2800 fps
Velocity at 100: yards 2652 fps
Velocity at 300: Yards 2360 fps
Velocity at 500: Yards 2088 fps
Energy At Muzzle: 2924 ft/lbs
Energy At 100 Yards: 2623 ft/lbs
Energy At 300 Yards: 2078 ft/lbs
Energy At 500 Yards: 1625 ft/lbs
Uses: Deer, Elk, Medium to Large Game
Specification |
|
Value |
Caliber |
|
30-06 Springfield |
Weight |
|
168 Grain |
Bullet Type |
|
AccuBond |
|
|
|
MFG NO |
|
60102 |
SKU |
|
5896433 |
UPC |
|
054041601023 |
The Below Information Has Been Provided From Our Gun Caliber Dictionary And Is Meant For Informational Purposes Only. It Is Not Intended to Describe The Unique Specifications For This Ammunition.
Properly "Caliber 30 Model of 1906," the 30-06 was developed at Springfield Armory for the 1903 Springfield rifle. The original 1903 cartridge, though very similar, used a round-nosed 220-grain bullet; the 1906 version used a 150-grain spitzer bullet with a slightly shorter case neck and case length of 2.494-inches. The 30-06, in Springfield, 1917 Enfield, and M1 Garand rifles, remained America's service cartridge through the Korean War. It was the most powerful cartridge ever adopted by a major military, and over time became America's most popular hunting cartridge. Today there are many good choices, but the 30-06 remains extremely popular throughout the world, suited for most North American big game and equally effective for African plains game. The most common standard loads today feature: 150-grain bullet at 2910 feet per second; 165-grain bullet at 2800 fps; and 180-grain bullet at 2700 fps. Choices in both rifles and ammunition are almost limitless. —
Craig Boddington
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