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166 hammer going relatively fast...impact was prolly north of 2700 fps...
Off the top of my head I've had two situations where a berger and a eld x failed deliver its energy into the goods...both nice bulls..both died so was able to see what happened ...
It would be cool to butcher an animal and have different guys explain what they think is going on as the bullet travels through an animal...because I think thats partially the reason for the discrepancy of good performance
Once again you're reading shit written by people with 0 real life experience and taking it as gospel..From what I’ve been reading, match bullets are for “long range target shooting” that have been marketed for “long range hunting”. Because of the nature of the bullet construction with such a thin jacket, why would anyone take the chance on only wounding the animal? I would think a Barnes, Partition, Aframe or Accubonds would be much better suited due to weight retention alone.
You shot a moose with a 75 grain bullet ? I can dig up pics of lead bullets causing less damage also lol..I have read those studies i believe, have they been up dated with modern monos ?
I'm really not trying to upset people by saying hammers are effective and my preferences for a bullet atm..idl why this is a sensitive subject lol
Thank you.
As a reference, this is from a bull moose at similar impact velocity from a lead core bullet at right under half the weight-
View attachment 234704
Frangible lead bullets can simply create more tissue damage at the same weight than any current mono.
Can you please provide details- bullet, impact velocity, impact location and track, penetration depth, wound width, etc?
You don’t have to “think” what happened. Google “Dr. Gary Robert’s terminal ballistics”, or “Martin Fackler terminal ballictics”. What and how bullets destroy tissue has been widely known and available since the early 90’s.
No, I didn’t shoot it- I was looking through the Binos.
What studies are you talking about? What I suggested to google aren’t “studies”. Wounding mechanisms don’t change based on a bullets composition- though monos, including every one that has mentioned so far have been tested.
You’re not upsetting anyone. If you haven’t read the thread, you should as you are missing the discussion.
I've killed over a dozen elk with the .270 and have witnessed at least 30 others killed with that caliber at ranges from 20 yards to 390 yards. It is an extremely capable caliber. From what I've seen, people go to higher calibers because they cannot shoot and want an elk hit "wherever" to go down regardless. Operator error.This year because I didn't draw any limited entry elk tags (love hunting rut crazed big bulls) I was helping an outfitter friend with his hunters. The first evening we had a hunter who was new to elk hunting in an area we had seen elk that morning. As we watched a sage clearing I continued quietly coaching the hunter that elk live in the bottom third of their body and try to place bullet close behind the front leg. About an hour before sundown a good bull stepped out closer than we were expecting at 160yds. The hunter was shooting off of sticks and had taken time to get comfortable. The hunter asked us if this was a good bull and we said to shoot when we stop it. I cow called and the bull locked up quartering slightly toward us.
At the shot the bull started moving to our left stumbling. After it went about 30 yds I stopped it with a cow call, the hunter shot again missing high left. The elk then turned back and was hit with the 3rd shot which sounded like a gut shot and the fourth shot was a miss. He then made it back into the quakies and the thick brush. I started having a crappy feeling and after 2 days we gave up the search. The hunter was using a .270 with 140 grain mono bullets.
The second troubling experience happened to an experienced hunter in camp who is also a great guide. After 17 years he drew a great tag and spent the summer patterning an incredible bull. On day 5 the bull finally presented a shot at a bit over 400 yds. At the shot the bull fell, got up, fell, got up into the brush and you guessed it was never seen again. My friend passed on numerous other bulls to concentrate on finding the wounded bull. At seasons end all he had was tag soup. The rifle he used was a .270. The guy handloads and is a good shot.
These 2 experiences caused me to reflect on my years of shooting elk and what conclusions I could draw to prevent problems again. Understand these are personal opinions I plan to follow and I realize many people will have different opinions, not looking for an argument. First- I will be adamant to hunters about where to hit elk, bottom third behind front leg on a broadside. Second- I will personally hunt with nothing smaller than my 7mm magnum with 160 grain or heavier lead bullets. After this year I may try 175 gr Nosler partitions. Third- I will limit my self to no shot longer than 400 yds and then only if I can shoot prone over a pack. The best bull I have ever shot at was facing me at 220 yds. I was sitting but wasn't using a rest. He fell at the shot and when I had worked my way over to him through the brush he was gone. My rifle was a 270 with a mono copper bullet. I am the one that pulled the trigger and the lost bull was my fault. It had taken 12 yrs to draw that tag.
This post is a little long but I hope it might help some new hunters. I realize other hunters have different ideas, do what's right for you.
S.Clancy, I see you replied to my post so I thought I could reply to yours. Seems like you feel anyone who shoots a rifle larger than a .270 does so because "they cannot shoot and want an elk hit wherever to go down". You are painting many of us with a broad brush as far as ability. Some of us shoot a helluva lot with rifles larger than .270 for enjoyment and I'm not sure I"d be questioning peoples skill. Some of us have also killed killed a shitpot full of big bulls. I only hunt big bull elk and have shot them with 4 calibers(300WSM, 30.06, 7MM, and .270). The 7MM with heavier lead bullets seemed to perform best for me so I favor it. Your experience has said the .270 works for you and I won't criticize your choice of caliber.I've killed over a dozen elk with the .270 and have witnessed at least 30 others killed with that caliber at ranges from 20 yards to 390 yards. It is an extremely capable caliber. From what I've seen, people go to higher calibers because they cannot shoot and want an elk hit "wherever" to go down regardless. Operator error.
I'm not saying don't shoot a larger caliber, I'm saying do it for the right reasons, like you described. Don't do it because you can't reliably hit the vitals, which I have seen.S.Clancy, I see you replied to my post so I thought I could reply to yours. Seems like you feel anyone who shoots a rifle larger than a .270 does so because "they cannot shoot and want an elk hit wherever to go down". You are painting many of us with a broad brush as far as ability. Some of us shoot a helluva lot with rifles larger than .270 for enjoyment and I'm not sure I"d be questioning peoples skill. Some of us have also killed killed a shitpot full of big bulls. I only hunt big bull elk and have shot them with 4 calibers(300WSM, 30.06, 7MM, and .270). The 7MM with heavier lead bullets seemed to perform best for me so I favor it. Your experience has said the .270 works for you and I won't criticize your choice of caliber.
We're good. I sincerely hope you and friends continue with the luck of finding good bulls.I'm not saying don't shoot a larger caliber, I'm saying do it for the right reasons, like you described. Don't do it because you can't reliably hit the vitals, which I have seen.
I agree the "behind the shoulder" term for many is confusing. Not enough people have broken down or paid attention when doing so to know where to aim. Many of the "bad shots" are just poor aiming points imo.
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Yeah, it seems to be anywhere from the front leg to the the rectum in a lot of cases. I suspect a lot of people just get excited and hold center mass, and hope the wobble or the trigger jerk will send it to the vitals.
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