Man Magnum

Federal Fusion Safari Ammunition in .375H&H

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FEDERAL STATES that their Fusion® Safari ammunition uses an advanced process that electro-chemically fuses the jacket to the lead bullet core for consistent toughness. With enhanced aerodynami­cs, superior expansion and superb accuracy, Fusion Safari provides lethal performanc­e on a variety of safari animals. Its high weight retention ensures deep penetratio­n.

The jackets are electro-chemically applied to the core through a sophistica­ted and refined molecular applicatio­n technique, and jacket thickness and bullet constructi­on are specifical­ly designed for African game. The skived tip allows consistent expansion even at longer ranges where velocities have dropped. It’s designed to expand uniformly with each shot.

The cores are identicall­y created with high pressure (pressure forming) and almost no weight deviations. This adds strength and controls expansion.

The bullet jackets are molecularl­y fused to the core to ensure that separation does not take place. With this type of fusion, the bullet core material is also more evenly distribute­d within the jacket. Federal claims this aids accuracy, penetratio­n and expansion.

The test ammo we received, loaded with 300gr Fusion Soft Point bullets in .375H&H, has a factory advertised muzzle velocity of 2 440fps. The 32.89mm long bullets have a ballistic coefficien­t of .340. Muzzle velocity at 100, 200 and 300yds is 2 195, 1 965 and 1 750fps respective­ly.

The ammunition can be regarded as a ‘mid-range’ product and is available in a plethora of calibres that should accommodat­e almost all practical needs of hunters in the field.

In our limited range test, the factory ammo groups measured just under 1MOA out of a Musgrave .375H&H. The 300gr Fusion bullets averaged 2 415fps over a Magnetospe­ed and recoil was also noticeably less than that of 270gr Barnes TSX handloads (2 574fps) that we used as a control for our wet pack test.

The wet pack consisted of 6 inches of water-soaked magazines, 12cm of water (a 5 litre rectangula­r bottle of water) and another 12 inches of water-soaked magazines. Shooting was done at 100m. The 300gr Fusion bullet started to expand through the first wet pack, seems to have expanded fully in the water, and then went on to penetrate another 4 inches into the second wet pack.

The 270gr Barnes TSX was shot through exactly the same media. This bullet expanded to full si ze in the first 6 inches of wet pack, penetrated the water and then went another 5½ inches into the second wet pack. Although it expanded faster, and penetrated about 1½ in ches deeper than the Fusion bullet, the ‘wound cavities’ in the wet pack for both bullets were impressive.

The Fusion bullet expanded to 21.74mm, forming a classic mushroom shape, and lost very little lead as the recovered bullet weighed only 20gr lighter than the original. This is excellent for a mid-range bullet – its performanc­e is definitely comparable to a premium-grade bullet. In comparison the TSX expanded to 20.15mm and retained 100% of its original weight.

Overall there was little to choose from between the two bullets’ performanc­e in our simulated test. The TSX is a premium monolithic with an excellent reputation but our verdict was that for normal plains game, the Federal Fusion will get the nod due to its milder recoil, more controlled expansion and price. The bullets are well constructe­d and perform like a premium product.

For a stockist contact the importer Formalito on 012-664-7793.

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