Remington Premier Accutip-v 224 Valkyrie 60 Grain AccuTip-V Boat-Tail
| Feature | Detail |
|---|---|
| Primary Use | Varmint hunting, precision rifle, medium-range target work |
| Bullet Type | AccuTip-V Boat-Tail with Gold Polymer Tip |
| Bullet Weight | 60 grain |
| Case Material | Brass (assumed; not explicitly confirmed by manufacturer) |
| Primer Type | Boxer (assumed; not explicitly confirmed by manufacturer) |
| Packaging | 20 rounds per box |
| Typical Price | $30.99/box โ $1.55/round |
| Closest Competitors | Federal American Eagle 224 Valkyrie 75 gr TMJ, Hornady Black 224 Valkyrie 88 gr ELD Match, Federal Gold Medal 224 Valkyrie 80.5 gr Sierra MatchKing |
Official Specs
| Spec | Value | Source |
|---|---|---|
| Muzzle Velocity (fps) | โ | Not published by manufacturer |
| Muzzle Energy (ft-lbs) | โ | Not published by manufacturer |
| Bullet Weight | 60 gr | Manufacturer |
| Bullet Type | AccuTip-V Boat-Tail, Gold Polymer Tip | Manufacturer |
| BC G1 | โ | Not published by manufacturer |
| BC G7 | โ | Not published by manufacturer |
| Manufacturer SKU | โ | Not published in available data |
| UPC | โ | Not published in available data |
| Reloadable | Yes (Boxer-primed brass assumed) | Assumed โ not explicitly confirmed |
Note: Remington has not published muzzle velocity, muzzle energy, or ballistic coefficient data for this specific load in the product data available at time of writing. All ballistic table values below are calculated estimates using published data for comparable 60 gr AccuTip-V projectiles in the 224 Valkyrie cartridge. Community-submitted chronograph data will be incorporated as it becomes available. SKU and UPC data were not present in the source product listing.
Ballistics Table
Calculated estimate. Real-world results vary by barrel length, temperature,altitude, and lot. Community submissions will provide measured muzzlevelocity for comparison.
Zero: 100 yards | Sight height: 1.5″ above bore | Estimated MV: ~3,300 fps (based on comparable 60 gr loads in 224 Valkyrie from 24″ barrel)
| Yards | Velocity (fps) | Energy (ft-lbs) | Trajectory (in) |
|---|---|---|---|
| 0 | ~3,300 | ~1,452 | -1.5 |
| 100 | ~3,010 | ~1,207 | 0.0 โ zero |
| 200 | ~2,735 | ~997 | -3.2 |
| 300 | ~2,475 | ~816 | -12.8 |
| 400 | ~2,228 | ~661 | -29.9 |
| 500 | ~1,995 | ~530 | -56.4 |
All values marked ~ are calculated estimates. No manufacturer-published velocity or BC data was available for this load. Actual performance will vary with barrel length (20″ AR-style barrels are common for 224 Valkyrie and will reduce velocity by approximately 100โ150 fps versus a 24″ test barrel).
Key takeaway: At an estimated 3,300 fps muzzle velocity, the 60 grain AccuTip-V stays supersonic well past 500 yards and delivers meaningful energy at medium range for varmint applications. The boat-tail base helps the bullet resist wind deflection better than flat-base designs at similar weights. For a 224 Valkyrie load on the lighter end of the bullet spectrum, this round is optimized for flat trajectory at shorter distances rather than long-range wind bucking โ shooters expecting 500+ yard precision should consider heavier, higher-BC offerings in this caliber. Within its intended range of 0โ300 yards, trajectory deviation is manageable for field shooting.
The AccuTip-V Bullet and Why This Load Exists
The 224 Valkyrie cartridge was introduced by Federal in 2018 specifically to push heavier, high-BC bullets to supersonic velocities at extreme range from a standard AR-15 platform. Most factory ammunition for the caliber leans toward heavier projectiles in the 75โ90 grain range for that reason. Remington’s choice to load a 60 grain AccuTip-V represents a different philosophy โ prioritizing rapid, violent fragmentation at moderate distances over long-range stability.
The AccuTip-V bullet is Remington’s varmint-specific design. The gold polymer tip is not merely a ballistic aid; it is engineered to be driven rearward into the lead core on impact, initiating near-instantaneous jacket fragmentation. The thin jacket construction is intentional โ this is a varmint bullet, not a controlled-expansion hunting bullet. It is designed to disintegrate rather than penetrate, making it effective on small to medium varmints but unsuitable for larger game where deep, retained-weight penetration is required.
The boat-tail base improves in-flight stability and reduces base drag compared to flat-base varmint bullets, giving the AccuTip-V a slight ballistic edge over older-generation designs like the Remington V-Max predecessor while retaining the explosive terminal behavior that defines the varmint bullet category.
Best Uses
Good fit:
- Prairie dog, ground squirrel, and similar small varmint hunting at ranges under 300 yards
- Coyote hunting where rapid energy transfer and minimal pelt damage at the entry site are acceptable trade-offs
- Precision varmint shooting from bolt-action or AR-15 platform rifles chambered in 224 Valkyrie
- Shooters who want a lighter, faster-shooting option within the 224 Valkyrie family for closer-range work
- Situations where flat trajectory at 0โ200 yards is prioritized over long-range wind resistance
Not the right tool for:
- Long-range precision shooting beyond 400 yards where heavier, higher-BC 224 Valkyrie loads outperform this weight class
- Deer, hogs, or any medium-to-large game โ the AccuTip-V is a fragmentation bullet not designed for adequate penetration on larger animals
- Jurisdictions with lead-core ammunition restrictions โ this is a conventional lead-core bullet
- Competitive target shooting where a full-metal-jacket or match-grade open-tip bullet is preferred or required
- Situations where over-penetration concern is low and maximum retained weight is needed
Reliability Notes
No structured submissions yet.
Based on manufacturer claims and open-source product descriptions, the AccuTip-V design has a documented track record across Remington’s Premier line in other calibers (.17 Rem, .204 Ruger, .22-250) where the gold polymer tip and thin jacket consistently initiate fragmentation at typical varmint velocities. Remington describes the terminal behavior as “violent fragmentation” upon impact โ this aligns with the design intent of the bullet class. The boat-tail seating is noted to contribute to consistent grouping at range. No specific accuracy claims (MOA figures) were published in the available product data and none are represented here. Feed and function reliability in AR-15 platforms chambered in 224 Valkyrie has not been specifically addressed in available open sources for this load; users of gas-operated semi-automatic rifles should verify function with their specific platform. All notes here reflect manufacturer claims or open-source information, not structured submission data.
Competitors
| Load | Weight | Bullet | BC G1 | Adv. Velocity | Price/box | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Federal American Eagle 224 Valkyrie 75 gr TMJ | 75 gr | Total Metal Jacket | ~0.350 | ~3,000 fps | ~$22โ$26 | Budget option; FMJ, not suitable for varmint fragmentation |
| Hornady Black 224 Valkyrie 88 gr ELD Match | 88 gr | ELD Match | 0.550 | ~2,675 fps | ~$28โ$34 | Premium long-range; much higher BC but heavier, less explosive terminal |
| Federal Gold Medal 224 Valkyrie 80.5 gr Sierra MatchKing | 80.5 gr | HPBT MatchKing | 0.540 | ~2,750 fps | ~$30โ$38 | Premium match; not a varmint bullet, optimized for accuracy |
| Hornady Varmint Express 224 Valkyrie 60 gr V-MAX | 60 gr | V-MAX Polymer Tip | ~0.265 | ~3,300 fps | ~$25โ$30 | Direct varmint competitor at same weight; well-established BC data available |
| Winchester Varmint X 224 Valkyrie 55 gr Polymer Tip | 55 gr | Polymer Tip | ~0.255 | ~3,400 fps | ~$26โ$32 | Lighter, faster; slightly less BC; budget-to-mid range varmint alternative |
| Federal Fusion 224 Valkyrie 90 gr Soft Point | 90 gr | Fusion Soft Point | ~0.420 | ~2,650 fps | ~$28โ$35 | Hunting-oriented; controlled expansion for deer-class game; not a varmint load |
Price Reality
- Typical retail range: $28โ$34 per 20-round box; case pricing (typically 10 boxes/200 rounds) not widely listed for this specific load at time of writing
- Per-round cost: approximately $1.55/round at the $30.99 price point
- Compared to Hornady Varmint Express 60 gr V-MAX in 224 Valkyrie (~$25โ$30/box), the Remington Premier carries a modest premium of roughly $1โ$5 per box for a comparable bullet weight and purpose
- Compared to Federal American Eagle 75 gr TMJ (~$22โ$26/box), this load is noticeably more expensive, though the two serve different purposes โ the AE TMJ is not a varmint bullet
- Compared to Federal Gold Medal 80.5 gr Sierra MatchKing (~$30โ$38/box), pricing is competitive, though those loads serve a different use case entirely
- Fair price benchmark: $30โ$33 per box represents reasonable market value for a 20-round premium varmint load in 224 Valkyrie. Prices consistently above $36/box for this specific load should be considered overpriced given available alternatives
Prices change. Check the Where to Buy block for current listings.
Where to Buy
Remington Premier Accutip-v 224 Valkyrie 60 Grain AccuTip-V Boat-Tail (Box)
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FAQ
Q: Is the Remington Premier AccuTip-V 60 grain suitable for deer hunting in 224 Valkyrie?
The AccuTip-V is a varmint-class bullet engineered for rapid, violent fragmentation on impact โ not for deep, controlled penetration into larger animals. On deer-sized game, the bullet is likely to fragment before reaching vital organs at typical hunting distances, particularly if it contacts heavy muscle or shoulder bone first. Most wildlife agencies that permit 224 Valkyrie for deer hunting would technically allow this load by caliber, but the bullet construction is not appropriate for ethical, reliable harvest of deer-class animals. Hunters pursuing deer or similar game in 224 Valkyrie should select a controlled-expansion load such as the Federal Fusion 90 gr or a bonded soft point.
Q: How does the gold polymer tip on the AccuTip-V differ from standard polymer-tipped varmint bullets like the Hornady V-MAX?
Both designs use a polymer tip to initiate fragmentation and improve the ballistic coefficient over a hollow-point-only design, but Remington’s gold polymer tip is specifically engineered to be driven rearward into the lead core on impact, acting as a mechanical initiator for jacket separation. The V-MAX operates on a similar principle. In practical terminal performance at varmint velocities, both designs produce rapid fragmentation; the primary differentiation between this load and Hornady Varmint Express 60 gr V-MAX in 224 Valkyrie is brand preference, published BC data availability (Hornady publishes BC figures; Remington does not for this load), and price.
Q: Will this ammunition function reliably in an AR-15 chambered in 224 Valkyrie?
The 224 Valkyrie cartridge was designed around the AR-15 platform using a modified 6.8 SPC bolt face, and factory loads are headspaced accordingly. This load should function in any properly headspaced 224 Valkyrie AR-15, but gas system tuning and buffer weight can affect reliability with specific loads. No specific function issues have been reported in open sources for this load, but shooters using adjustable gas blocks should verify reliable cycling. Bolt-action rifles chambered in 224 Valkyrie will have no platform-specific concerns.
Q: Why doesn’t Remington publish muzzle velocity or ballistic coefficient data for this load?
This is a known gap in Remington’s current product data presentation for several Premier line loads. Remington has historically published velocity data on box packaging and in printed catalogs, but online product listings for some loads โ including this one โ do not carry that data in the available retail product descriptions. BC data for the AccuTip-V bullet in this weight is also not publicly listed by Remington, making independent ballistic calculation less precise than for competitors who publish full data. Until manufacturer-confirmed figures are available, all ballistic projections for this load should be treated as estimates.
Q: Is the 60 grain AccuTip-V a good choice for long-range shooting in 224 Valkyrie compared to heavier options?
The 224 Valkyrie platform was specifically engineered to stabilize heavier, high-BC bullets โ particularly in the 75โ90 grain range โ at supersonic velocities past 1,000 yards. A 60 grain bullet at this BC level will go transonic and lose stability significantly sooner than an 80โ88 grain high-BC option. For shooters whose primary goal is long-range precision past 500 yards, loads like the Hornady Black 88 gr ELD Match or Federal Gold Medal 80.5 gr Sierra MatchKing are better suited to the caliber’s design intent. The 60 gr AccuTip-V is optimized for the 0โ300 yard varmint application where its flat trajectory and explosive terminal performance are most relevant.


