


Prod. No: 20160370

Norma Jaktmatch .243 Winchester 6.2g
Intent
Ballistic Coefficient
Bullet Weight
MRD
Velocity
Energy
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
Metrics
Imperial
V0
900 m/s
2953 f/s
V100
784 m/s
2687 f/s
V200
678 m/s
2436 f/s
V300
580 m/s
2199 f/s
Energy
Metrics
Imperial
E0
2511 J
1839 ft.-lb
E100
1905 J
1523 ft.-lb
E200
1425 J
1252 ft.-lb
E300
1043 J
1020 ft.-lb
MRD
Metrics
Imperial
0
178 m
196 yd
50
17 m
0.5 yd
80
35 m
—
100
40 m
1.5 yd
150
26 m
1.4 yd
200
-30 m
-0.2 yd
250
-132 m
-3.2 yd
300
-286 m
-7.8 yd
Wind
Metrics
Imperial
100 m 40 mm
100 yd 1.2 in
200 m 170 mm
200 yd 4.9 in
300 m 413 mm
300 yd 11.9 in
Zeroing distance
See how different zeroing distances shift point of impact across the range.
About the caliber
The .243 Win. was originally a wildcat designed by Warren Page who necked down the .308 case in the early fifties. The goal was to make a light deer rifle which would still have the advantages of the high-velocity .22-calibers for varmint hunting. In 1955 Winchester made it a commercial round. The .243 is a very popular round all over the world for hunting medium sized game, probably due to its flat trajectory and very mild recoil. Surprisingly enough its popularity never reached the same degree when it comes to varmint hunting in spite of the .243" bullets better wind-bucking capabilities.
In Europe, however, the .243 suffers from the fact that only in Scotland does it meet the legal requirements for a big game cartridge to be used on anything larger than roe deer.
For small game and varmint hunting bullets in the 70-85 grain range are suitable, but normally the expansion of theses bullets are too rapid to give the necessary penetration needed for quick kill on larger game from pronghorn antelope and upwards. For this bullets weighing 90-100 grains are a much better choice. Although one shot kills have been made on much larger animals than Mule Deer, the .243 is not an elk rifle by any reasonable standard.
For hunting edible birds and fox the full metal jacketed bullets will do a much better job than the equivalent bullets in .22-caliber does.