Remington 270 Winchester 130 Grain Pointed Soft Point Core-Lokt Md: R270W2
For Varmint Or Big Game Hunting, Target Shooting, Training exercises Or Any Other High Volume Shooting Situation Remington Centerfire Rifle Ammunition offers Value Without Any Compromise In Quality Or Performance. Remington Rifle Ammunition offers The Choice Many Types Of Bullets And Many Different Rifle Calibers. Select From Hollow Point For varmints, Core-Lokt Or Bronze Point Bullets For Big Game.
Caliber: 270 Winchester
Bullet Type: Pointed Soft Point Core-Lokt
Bullet Weight: 130 Gr
Muzzle Energy: 1875 ft Lbs
Muzzle Velocity: 2710 Fps
Rounds/Box: 20 Rounds Per Box, ""
Manufacturer: Remington
Model: R270W2
SKU: SS_66179
Total Rounds 20
Price Break Discount On 10 Boxes Or More. %5 Discount Will Be applied at Check Out.
Specification |
|
Value |
Caliber |
|
270 Winchester |
Weight |
|
130 Grain |
Bullet Type |
|
Soft Point |
|
|
|
MFG NO |
|
R270W2 |
SKU |
|
1052792 |
UPC |
|
047700052908 |
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.
The 270 Winchester was introduced in 1925 in the Winchester Model 54 bolt-action, forerunner to the Model 70. Based on the 30-06 case necked down, it was the first production cartridge to use a .277-inch bullet. Why this bullet diameter was chosen is not clear. The intent, however, was to create a cartridge that shot flatter than the 30-06 and produced less recoil. This effort was so successful that the 270 Winchester remains the world's most popular 270 cartridge...and since 1925 only three other commercial cartridges have used this bullet diameter. With a 130-grain bullet at 3060 feet per second and a 150-grain bullet at 2950 the 270 is powerful and flat shooting. It is adequate for game up to elk, ideal for virtually all American deer hunting, and, as it's long-time champion, gunwriter Jack O'Connor, so often wrote, it is a marvelous choice for mountain hunting. It is a standard chambering for almost all rifle makers, and choices in factory loads run into the many dozens. —
Craig Boddington