Mike Casselton
It's the long range crowd looking for the latest greatest
Thursday, December 07, 2017, 12:09

needs to 'splain the reasoning of this to me. Federal has their new 224 Valkyrie cartridge out, claiming it is identical to the 22 Nosler (nice of them to copy the Nosler cartridge and then brag about it, huh?) Now here is where they lost me. They say in the new Supermatch barrel it gets a 90 grain bullet out at 2650 fps. You with me so far? Now look at the ballistics of our 257 Raptor in a 14" barrel. It duplicates that. An 87 grain bullet at 2650. In a pistol. So what part of this super duper cartridge from Federal (that brags that they are a copy of the 22 Nosler) am I missing? The whole article is below. One of you ballistic experts here need to tell this old goat what is so wondermuss about the Federal 224 Valkyrie.

(Here is the whole article)
The new JP Enterprises .224 Valkyrie Supermatch barrels are one of the first aftermarket offerings in support of the new .224 Valkyrie cartridge launch from Federal Premium. The new barrels are designed for use in AR-style rifles, just like the new round.

"This new round is a serious paradigm shift for the AR-15 platform," JP Enterprises Founder John Paul said. "In testing, consistent 1000-yard (or more) hits are very achievable."

In the design phase, JP Enterprises collaborated with Federal Premium in order to develop the ideal aftermarket barrels tuned specifically for the new round. This enables the hobbyist AR-15 rifle builder to put together a precision rifle with built-right components, and it also ensures that buyers of JP AR-15s chambered in .224 Valkyrie will receive the utmost in accuracy and precision from their new guns.

The JP Enterprises .224 Valkyrie Supermatch barrels are machined from 416R stainless steel and feature button-rifled bores that are lead-lapped and measured with air gauges to ensure as much consistency as possibly. The barrels are then cryogenically treated to reduce the amount of point-of-impact drift experienced as the barrels heat up under firing, in addition to enhancing barrel life and accuracy.

The barrels are available in three different options. The first option is a 20-inch, light-weight-contour barrel that features a 1:7-inch rate of twist. The other two options both feature medium-weight contours and a 1:7-inch twist rate and are available in 20-inch and 22-inch lengths.

Each barrel offering from the company is drilled with a an XL gas port, which provides an improved dwell time and minimizes issues with pressure. In addition to being sold as components, the JP Enterprises Supermatch barrels are also offered in barrel kits, complete with the buyer's choice of a muzzle device, gas system and the company's EnhancedBolt assembly.

Testing results provided by the company indicated that a 90-grain Sierra MatchKing .224 Valkyrie bullet fired out of a 20-inch Supermatch barrel provided a muzzle velocity of 2,650 fps with a G1 ballistics coefficient of .531.

JP Enterprises .224 Valkyrie Supermatch barrels will be available in January 2018 at a starting retail price of $569.

They are looking for the lightest recoil and the highest ballistic coefficient possible.
That's why the 6 and 6.5 Creedmore basically duplicate the 243 and the 250 Savage.
Getting the higher coefficient keeps the bullet flight flatter.
The 6.5 Swede did this nearly a century ago. They just didn't have the bullets, powder and optics available at that time.

This is how I feel about all of it.
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