Ammo For Sale - Handgun Calibers
From .204 Ruger. (2009, January
7). In Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia. Retrieved 20:28, March 7,
2009, from http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=.204_Ruger&oldid=262521154:
"The .204 Ruger is a centerfire rifle cartridge developed in
2004 by Hornady and Ruger. At the time of its introduction, the .204
Ruger was the highest velocity commercially produced cartridge when
loaded with factory ammunition, and the only cartridge produced
commercially for bullets of .20 inch/5 mm caliber.
The .204 Ruger was developed from the .222 Remington Magnum, which
has the second largest case capacity in the family that began with
the .222 Remington. Only the European 5.6x50 Magnum is larger, which
itself is a lengthened version of the .222 Remington Magnum. The
.222 Rem. Mag. provides about 10% more case capacity than the most
popular member of the family, the NATO 5.56x45 mm (.223 Rem). To
make the .204, the .222 Rem. Mag. was necked down to .204 inches (5
mm). Bullets available in .20 caliber range from 26 to 50 grains
(1,7 to 3.25g), and although the selection is limited, it is growing
as the cartridge gains wider popularity. The Hornady factory load is
listed at 4,225 ft/s (1288 m/s) with a 32-grain (2.1 g) bullet. To
achieve these velocities, the factory uses a proprietary powder
composition specially formulated for the .204 Ruger, and not
currently (2007) available to handloaders. Reloading data from
Hornady, using commercially available powders, indicates velocity
peaking at just under 4,200 ft/s (1,300 m/s) with the 32-grain (2.1
g) bullet. Many AR-15 rifle manufacturers, including Remington, now
offer .204 Ruger as an alternative chambering alongside the usual
5.56mm/.223.
The .204 Ruger was the second Ruger-named cartridge produced by a
partnership between Ruger and Hornady, the first being the big bore
.480 Ruger revolver cartridge, introduced in 2003 for the Super
Redhawk. With the backing of a major gunmaker and a major ammunition
company, the round was an instant success, with other ammunition
makers and firearms makers quickly producing offerings in the new
caliber. Ruger's initial offerings included the bolt action Model 77
MKII, and the single shot Ruger #1, and Hornady offered loadings
with 32 and 40-grain (2.6 g) bullets.
The .204 Ruger is proving to be a very accurate and efficient
cartridge: an early tester reported 1/2 MOA groups at 100 yards (91
m) with the Hornady loads and a Ruger #1 Varmint rifle. This is not
surprising, considering that the first cartridge in the family, the
.222 Remington, was a top benchrest shooting cartridge for many
years after its introduction.
The .204 Ruger was intended primarily for varmint rifles, which
require bullets with flat trajectories but not much mass or kinetic
energy. The .20 was "splitting the difference" between the popular
.22 varmint rounds such as the .220 Swift and .22-250 Remington, and
the tiny .17 caliber rounds such as the .17 Remington and the .17
HMR. The resulting cartridge provides somewhat higher velocities
than any of these, giving a maximum point blank range of more than
270 yards (248 m).
Ruger's claim to velocity king with the .204 was based on two
points. First, that other 4000+ ft/s cartridges were wildcats, not
commercially produced; the 5mm/35 SMc, for example, can reach 4,800
ft/s (1,500 m/s) using a 30-grain (1.9 g) bullet.
Second, the ammunition used to achieve the 4200+ ft/s was only
available from Hornady using a special powder not available to the
general public [2]. Handloaders typically achieve velocities more in
the area of 4,050 ft/s (1,230 m/s) using a 32-grain (2.1 g)
bullet.[3]. Note that handloads using a 40-grain (2.6 g) bullet in
other commercial cartridges such as the .220 Swift and .223 WSSM
also achieve similar velocities to the .204 Ruger. The advantage of
the .20 caliber .204 is that it achieves these velocities using less
powder, less recoil, and less heat than the heavier cartridges. The
204 Ruger has a maximum range of approximately 500 yards (460 m)
One of the down-sides to firing bullets at such velocities is short
barrel life. Generally speaking, extremely fast bullets tend to wear
out a barrel significantly sooner than slower ones. The high
pressures, temperatures, and friction can quickly wear away portions
of the throat and rifling. This erosion results in deteriorating
accuracy. The amount of erosion and time it takes to negatively
affect accuracy is based on things like temperature [4], bore-size,
velocity, etc. This effect is common to all small arms cartridges
that approach or exceed muzzle velocities of 4,000 ft/s (1,200 m/s),
including the .17 Remington, .220 Swift, and .22-250 Remington."