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The 300 AAC (Advanced Armament Corporation) Blackout (designated 300 BLK by SAAMI) is a 7.82mm caliber designed to outperform in terminal ballistics over the 5.56 NATO/.223 Remington. It’s designed for the AR platform and delivers superb knock-down power in close-quarter battles.
Discover .300 Blackout ballistics by the inch and why it’s the best choice for hunting and home defense. Here’s the best .300 Blackout ammo and barrel lengths.
A look at 300 Blackout ballistics including velocity, energy and drop data for some of the most popular loads among American shooters. 300 Blackout is taking the shooting world by storm, and for good reason.
Find out everything you need to know about 300 Blackout ballistics, what it is, why you'd use it, and comparisons to other common AR-15 calibers.
The .300 AAC Blackout (designated as the 300 BLK by the SAAMI [1] and 300 AAC Blackout by the C.I.P. [2]), also known as 7.62×35 mm, is an intermediate cartridge developed in the United States by Advanced Armament Corporation (AAC) for use in the M4 carbine.
Use this ballistic calculator in order to calculate the flight path of a bullet given the shooting parameters that meet your conditions. This calculator will produce a ballistic trajectory chart that shows the bullet drop, bullet energy, windage, and velocity.
We'll examine 300 Blackout effective range and the best barrel length for the caliber. We'll also look at the best 300 BLK ammo.
What Are the 300 Blackout Ballistics? 300 Blackout External Ballistics; 300 Blackout Terminal Ballistics; Why Do People Use 300 Blackout Ammo? 300 Blackout Ammo Is More Powerful, Efficient, and Lethal When Fired out of Short-Barreled Rifles Than 5.56 Ammo; 300 Blackout Ammo Is More Powerful Than 5.56 Ammo When Shooting Subsonic (Quiet) Bullets
Complete 300 AAC Blackout ammunition ballistics Chart. Compare all 300 AAC Blackout ammunition manufacturers on one chart.
The .300 BLK uses bullets with a higher ballistic coefficient but isn’t moving fast enough to take advantage of its sleeker projectiles. This is why the 5.56 shoots flatter and with less wind drift despite having almost half as much energy.