Try this on for size Roob - 155gr vs 175gr Barnes Match BT bullets, velocity is based on ADI max powder charge data using AR2208.
Be sure to click the image to see the full table out to 1,500m.

- .308 wind drift trajectory
- 308-wind-drift-trajectory.gif (15.09 KiB) Viewed 6059 times
In this example the heavier bullet has the edge across the entire range, as a general rule though distance is going to be your decider.
As you can see in the table; despite starting off faster, due to the lower BC of the lighter bullet it's eventually going slower than its heavier competitor and any advantage gained by speed is lost. As the speed washes off the gap closes until the lighter bullet becomes disadvantaged.
At shorter distances, a different comparison will probably yield different results. e.g. if you compared a
much lighter,
much faster bullet to the heavier one, I expect the lighter bullet will have the advantage like Chronos' example outlined.
At longer ranges though the heavier bullet will always have the advantage.
If you're shooting inside 400m you might as well shoot the lighter bullets and not have to put up with the recoil. If you're shooting further and want every possible advantage shoot heavier bullets.
Velocity is temporary, ballistic coefficient if forever
