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Prod. No: 20157260

Norma Jaktmatch .223 Remington 3.6g

Intent

Hunting

Ballistic Coefficient

0.209 G1

Bullet Weight

3.6 g / 55 gr

MRD

184 m (200 yd)

Velocity

990 m/s / 3248 f/s

Energy

1765 J / 1289 ft.-lb

This product data is zeroed with a 610 cm / 24 in barrel

Premium FMJ Ammo för everyday practice

JAKTMATCH is THE practice ammunition on the market. Consistent firing in tight groupings - identical to most of NORMA's hunting bullets at standard ranges. Also loaded to similar velocities as our standard hunting ammunition, for practice on moving targets.


Practicing your shooting, zeroing your rifle or hunting Capercaille in the tree tops, JAKTMATCH has been the number one choice for Nordic hunters through decades.

A meticulous production process, refined over decades, ensures high quality and consistency in every round. Bullets and cases are produced on site and the cartridges are all assembled here in the NORMA factory in Åmotfors Sweden to ensure the highest quality all the way.

Range

Allround

Long Range

Recoil

Light

Heavy

Ballistic Performance

Key factors that shape bullet flight, impact and downrange consistency.

Velocity

Imperial

Metrics

V0

3248 f/s

990 m/s

V100

835 m/s

V200

2359 f/s

696 m/s

V300

1976 f/s

571 m/s

Energy

Imperial

Metrics

E0

1289 ft.-lb

1765 J

E50

945 ft.-lb

E100

680 ft.-lb

1256 J

E200

477 ft.-lb

873 J

E300

588 J

Wind

Imperial

Metrics

100 yd 0.66 in

100 m 45 mm

200 yd 2.84 in

200 m 196 mm

300 yd 6.94 in

300 m 484 mm

Zeroing distance

See how different zeroing distances shift point of impact across the range.

50 m

80 m

100 m

150 m

200 m

300 m

400 m

500 m

600 m

80 m

-6.0

-3.0

-35.0

-110.0

-423.0

---

100 m

-4.0

2.0

-31.0

-104.0

-414.0

---

150 m

6.0

19.0

21.0

-63.0

-352.0

---

200 m

22.0

44.0

52.0

47.0

-258.0

---

300 m

--

0.0

-

0.0

0.0

0.0

0.0

About the caliber

Shortly after the introduction of the .222 Remington experiments began to make a similar cartridge for military use. The advantages were obvious as a soldier naturally can carry many more rounds of a much smaller and lighter cartridge. Drawbacks was the reduced long range potential of the smaller bullet and its lesser penetration. The first .223 appeared in 1957 and was mainly the work of Robert Hutton of Guns & Ammo and Gene Stoner of Armalite. One of the requirements for the new cartridge was that it could retain a velocity exceeding the speed of sound at 500 yards. This was not possible with the .222, but with its slightly longer case and a 55 grains boattail bullet the .223 met the demands. The cartridge was adopted by the U.S. Army in 1964 and used in the Vietnam war. Since then it has been adopted by NATO as a standard military cartridge, but with a heavier 63 grains bullet which demands a quicker twist (1 in 7") than used in most sporting rifles for the civilian market (1 in 10, 12 or 14").

The dimensions of military chambers and cartridges vary slightly from the sporting version that was brought out by Remington shortly after the .223 was adopted by the military. Accordingly military ammunition might produce high chamber pressure in sporting rifles. Military cases quite often has thicker brass and starting loads must be reduced by at least 10 per cent.

For sporting purposes the cartridge is normally at its best using bullets of 60 grains or less. It is suitable for the same range of purposes as .222 Remington, and will add some yards to the effective range. Due to the adoption by NATO the .223 is expected to be the more popular choice in a few years by European shooters.

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