Introduction

In my last article, Selecting A Rifle: An Organized Approach, I discussed an approach to rifle selection. If you’re a soldier, it’s pretty easy – the Army presses a rifle into your hands. The approach I describe is more general, based on a number of different applications. Varmint hunting, midsize game, large game, target shooting, long range shooting, police marksmanship – any number of mission sets.

To follow this approach, you need a good understanding of your target and your tools. The latter means an understanding of cartridges in general, bullets, and ballistics. Armed with that understanding, you can decide what bullet and cartridge are best suited for your target. That decision will guide you to select the right rifle for your application.

With that in mind, this article will give you an overview of cartridges and the issues involved in selecting them. The process doesn’t stop there. As you’ll see, this material simply informs your selection of bullet, that which delivers the smack to put your target down.

 

The Cartridge

Figure 2 shows a cartridge that will be fired by your rifle (or pistol). It consists of two parts. The first is a shell casing that contains a charge of gunpowder. The second is a projectile – the bullet. When you fire your rifle, the powder in the shell casing ignites. The burning of that powder causes gasses to expand and propel the bullet down the barrel. Grooves in the barrel – the rifling – spin the bullet to keep it stable in flight. The barrel flies in what is called a ballistic trajectory to your target.

 

cartridge
Fig. 2 The cartridge: a shell casing and a bullet.

 

Now you can go down to the store a buy a box of cartridges like the ones shown in Figure 3. These are Hornady 195-grain ELD (Extra Low Drag) Match-grade .300 Winchester Magnums.