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Subsconic will work but, you have to approach it in the right way to take full advantage of it. The wind drift advantage can only be maximized with the right bullet shape and the load has to have a very low extreme spread. The rifling has to fully stabilized the bullet. If you have those three thing under control you'll be successful. Sounds easy but, it's not! You have to dedicate a rifle and barrel to it, that's number one. The greenhill formula comes closest to predicting a twist rate for any bullet that you want to shoot in the subsonic range but, don't use the upper limit on it. i.e. if it says that a 1.03 long bullet is the max length that will stabilize in a 15 twist, .321 barrel, go 5% under that. Not all 15 twist (or any other twist rate) will be right on the money (Douglas only guarantees within 1/2 inch), when your working on the limit, you have to be sure so, I'd either go with a 5% reduction in length or 1" faster twist In my case, I used a 1.19 lg spitzer bullet (430 gr) in a 20 twist, 1.15 full octagon 31" long Douglas barrel mounted on a Sharps Borchardt. I did not buy the barrel to do subsonic work or I would have ordered a 18 twist. My best load was 10.0 gr Unique, 971 fps, 19 ES, 6.9 SD, no wad. I got a .84 group with that combo @ 100. It's a comfortable load to shoot in my 15 lb gun The old style flat point bullets will handicap you, a lot. You need a aerodynamic shape, similar to the modern spitzer shapes that we use but, with a radius nose of at least .030R. That with a 4 to 6 caliber ogive will get you a bullet like you need. Sectional density will then be a factor of the length of the bands and of course, the higher the BC the better but, you have to increase the twist rate to match the overall length. The two things you don't want in a subsonic bullet is a flat or a sharp point. A .060 to .080 flat (32 cal) is better than the larger flats of nose pour bullets and may be better than a sharp point but, you need a radius for best results
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