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.338 Whisper

US wildcat cartridge from the 1990s


US wildcat cartridge from the 1990s

FieldValue
name.338 Whisper
originUSA
typeRifle, subsonic
designerJ.D. Jones
design_date1990s
manufacturerSSK Industries
is_SI_specsyes
parent[7mm BR Remington](7mm-br-remington)
case_typeRimless, bottleneck
bullet8.59
neck9.11
shoulder11.60
base11.83
rim_dia11.91
rim_thick1.20
case_length38.08
length67.51
bw1200
btype1BT
vel11077
en1515
bw2250
btype2BT
vel21040
en2600
bw3300
btype3BT
vel31050
en3735
test_barrel_length12"
balsrcCartridges of the World * {{cite book
lastBarnes
firstFrank C.
editorSkinner, Stan
titleCartridges of the World
edition11th
orig-date1965
year2006
publisherGun Digest Books
locationIola, WI, USA
pages252, 284
isbn0-89689-297-2}}

| orig-date = 1965 The .338 Whisper (8.59x38mm) is a wildcat cartridge in the Whisper family, a group of cartridges developed in the early 1990s by J.D. Jones of SSK Industries. Unlike the smaller caliber cartridges in the Whisper family, loads for the .338 Whisper are mainly limited to subsonic velocities.

Versions

There are two versions of the .338 Whisper:

  1. The original .338 Whisper #1 (metric: 8.6x38mm) is based on the 7mm BR Remington case, necked up (enlarged) to take a .338" bullet. As the 7mm Bench Rest and .308 Winchester cases share the same case head dimensions, conversion to .338 Whisper from a rifle previously chambered in .308 Winchester (or any cartridge based on the .308 Winchester case, such as .243 Winchester, .260 Remington, 7 mm-08 Remington, etc...) is a relatively simple task.
  2. The second version (called .338 Whisper #2 by SSK, metric: 8.6x35mm) is based on the .221 Remington Fireball case, simplifying conversion of firearms chambered in 5.56×45mm or its commercial counterpart, .223 Remington.

Subsonic

A subsonic cartridge is designed to fire its bullets at velocities slower than the speed of sound (1128 ft/s at 70 °F) to avoid the sonic crack caused by the bullet breaking the sound barrier, which contributes in large part to the overall noise produced when using a firearm. Subsonic loads are often designed to avoid the turbulent transonic zone (~900ft/s - 1350ft/s or 0.8 to 1.2 mach) entirely. This allows the firearm to be suppressed relatively easily. To ensure terminal performance at subsonic velocities, heavy bullets for the caliber (250 -) are desirable. Of course the silent, subsonic loads should be loaded below the speed of sound with preferably the heaviest and longest bullet the .338 calibre has to offer. Currently this is the 300 gr Berger Hybrid Open Tip Match (OTM) with a BC of 0.818 and a length of 1.820 in.

Supersonic

Only those .338 based on the 7mmBR case offer meaningful supersonic velocities. A full power load with fast powder can push a 165 gr Barnes bullet to a muzzle velocity of 2520 ft/s. Another favourite pick for such an exercise would be the 180 gr Nosler Accubond or the 200 gr Nosler Ballistic tip traveling at 2200 -. Often found to be too explosive in high power rifles, at such moderate speeds the Ballistic Tips provide both expansion and penetration - this combination with excellent accuracy and a high ballistic coefficient.

Trademark

"Whisper" is a registered trademark of SSK Industries. In order to sidestep this branding (and/or any licensing fees required to use the "Whisper" name legally), other manufacturers tend to use different names for cartridges in the Whisper family. For example, .338 Murmur, .338 Phantom and .338 Benchrest. The .300 Whisper (the most popular cartridge of the family) is often called ".300 Fireball" or ".300-221".

References

References

  1. "338 Whisper from J.D. Jones and SSK industries, home of the "Hand Cannon"".
  2. [http://www.lasc.us/RangingShot338WhisperRevisited.htm User "Review" on the .338 ammo]
  3. http://www.reloadersnest.com/frontpage.asp?CaliberID=389 Information on the two different whisper versions
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