Whats the minimum sized Elk cartridge for shooting up to 500 yards? Is a 338Win Mag overkill? I thought it was all about bullet placement? Discuss.
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Enter your cartridge hereWhats the minimum sized Elk cartridge for shooting up to 500 yards?
No such thing as overkillIs a 338Win Mag overkill?
it is, was, and always will beI thought it was all about bullet placement?
Already haveDiscuss.
No such thing as overkill
The same can be said of the Ultra mag crowd, a bad shot is a bad shot. No amount of powder or lead can make you a better marksman, a shot through the heart with a .257R is way better than a double ham shot with .416R. This discussion has been had over and over, and it should be a sticky in this subforum. I've said it before; there are probably just as many animals lost to magnums as there are to non-magnums, expanding to non-expanding broadheads, short range to long range, etc.etc.etc. Its beating a dead horse. It ALWAYS comes down to the skill of the hunter, and the placement of his shot, the rest is all luck and conditions. I dont bet, but if I did, I'd bet that the next average 10 hunters that came down the trail behind me, couldn't put a hit on an 6" target 10 out of 10 times at anything beyond 100yds. And THAT is where all these opinion based complaints about .308's .243's etc. come from. Undedicated enthusiast's who love to hunt, but lack the skill. Then blame it on "this damn rifle!" instead of their own lack of preparation. All of us have heard the stories; "my uncle had a .270, what a POS that thing was, took three shots to put down a deer" so every impressionable mind around that campfire automatically puts the .270 into a category with pony's, pink pajama's, and Tapco coated SKS's. And we wont even get into the care of these firearms, how many of these people pull grandpa's old rifle out, wipe off the dust, spit on the bolt, and then head into the mountains to kill bambi? never doubting it shoots like Han Solo's lazer blaster? If people spent as much time preparing to take the life of an animal as they do buying beer for the hunt, they may find their averages increasing...You always read/hear the stories about the KILLS. The "minimum " cartridge folks NEVER publicize their failures and losses.
The same can be said of the Ultra mag crowd, a bad shot is a bad shot. No amount of powder or lead can make you a better marksman, a shot through the heart with a .257R is way better than a double ham shot with .416R. This discussion has been had over and over, and it should be a sticky in this subforum. I've said it before; there are probably just as many animals lost to magnums as there are to non-magnums, expanding to non-expanding broadheads, short range to long range, etc.etc.etc. Its beating a dead horse. It ALWAYS comes down to the skill of the hunter, and the placement of his shot, the rest is all luck and conditions. I dont bet, but if I did, I'd bet that the next average 10 hunters that came down the trail behind me, couldn't put a hit on an 6" target 10 out of 10 times at anything beyond 100yds. And THAT is where all these opinion based complaints about .308's .243's etc. come from. Undedicated enthusiast's who love to hunt, but lack the skill. Then blame it on "this damn rifle!" instead of their own lack of preparation. All of us have heard the stories; "my uncle had a .270, what a POS that thing was, took three shots to put down a deer" so every impressionable mind around that campfire automatically puts the .270 into a category with pony's, pink pajama's, and Tapco coated SKS's. And we wont even get into the care of these firearms, how many of these people pull grandpa's old rifle out, wipe off the dust, spit on the bolt, and then head into the mountains to kill bambi? never doubting it shoots like Han Solo's lazer blaster? If people spent as much time preparing to take the life of an animal as they do buying beer for the hunt, they may find their averages increasing...
You always read/hear the stories about the KILLS. The "minimum " cartridge folks NEVER publicize their failures and losses.
I killed not one, but TWO elk with my 9mm sidearm. 147 gr WW subsonics. Both were tangled in barbed wire fences. Does that make the 9mm an elk cartridge? NO.
Use Enough Gun.
coldboremiracle said:...If people spent as much time preparing to take the life of an animal as they do buying beer for the hunt, they may find their averages increasing...
To some degree yes but by using enough caliber, the hunter still has to place the bullet in the area to fell the animal so it should be use enough gun that you can shoot the most accurate. Using a 338rum is enough but can hunter place the bullet as accurate as they could with a 257r, 243, 7.08, 308?. A miss is a miss the horsepower behind the miss can never make up for the miss. And, every animal and every shot is different. No two or three or 500 will react to the shot the same. Some times a direct kill shot with a 243 will tip over in its tracks while a 338 in the same area the animal walks just like a kill shot from a 338 will go limp while the 243 will walk off. No two shots or animals will be the same.
i cannot relate to other states but I have been to Alaska F&G sight in day at their range. Once again, who is most likely to place the kill shot, a 250 bearded macho with his 338rum shooting a wide group as he jerks the trigger from the recoil or the 120 pound soaking wet 18 year old with her 243 slicing center. I actually helped a guy who said moose are tuff to kill and his 375HH would not kill a moose last year, something like 3 shots in that moose and it walked off, absorbed my shots like it was a 22, so this year he was proud toting the 416rem and if he hit a 10" circle at 100 once it was by pure luck of the jerk. I just shook my head and said good luck my friend.
Oh believe me I have my fair share of misses with 243, 7.08, 7mag, 300Wby, 340wby but it was not the horsepower per say but the trigger actuator who did not place the bullet. But also had them go limp in their tracks from all those. The caliber had not much to do with it, it was the shot placement, the bullet doing its job, the animal and just pure luck how all these came together to either go dead or walk.
Can I get an "Amen"?
That's probably one of the best statements I've heard on this forum in all my time here.
I know a guy in Alaska who after claiming he put 3 rounds into a moose from 70 yards away, with his .30-06 with a 3-9 Leupy, the moose walked off. So he goes out and buys himself a .338 WM. After bragging to my buddy about his new rifle, my buddy insists on taking her to the range, the guy claims he doesnt need to because the scope was BORE SIGHTED, by the guy at the gun shop. When they go to the range they also bring along the WEAK 30-06 along. When my buddy started shooting the -06 he couldnt put it on paper @ 100yds., so they moved it in. No hits on paper (24x24in) @50, so they start shooting at a dirt pile at 50. The rifle was shooting about 4 ft off at 50 yards. This dingbat never bothered to check his sight scope before the hunting season, and ended up spending over $1,200 bucks on a new rifle because of that. To me getting another rifle wouldnt be a problem, but he sees it as having one too many rifles, ended up selling the .338 for a huge loss.
It's been said that bullets matter more than headstamp!
It's been said that bullets matter more than headstamp!
It could be said eiter way and mean as much, shot placement always trumps the rest.
My buddy hunts with his 22-250 with a hand loaded 55gr Hornady V-Max and is all he needs. Seen kids kill nice bulls with 243. All about shot placement.Whats the minimum sized Elk cartridge for shooting up to 500 yards? Is a 338Win Mag overkill? I thought it was all about bullet placement? Discuss.