This is one of the few situations I actually prefer Barnes. But if you're gonna shoot thin jacket varmint bullets, lung shots work just fine or else it'll make a complete mess of the shoulder.I would look at barnes 50 grain rounds . Nice high velocity out of a 22-250 . If you hit shoulder . No problems
Lol its not like you're blood trailing rock chucks after getting tagged with a 22-250, it's known for blowing varmints into 1000 tiny little chunks and mist. Centerfire "varmint rounds" are only called varmint rounds because they're cheaper and easier to shoot in large volumes than larger calibers. Not saying its a good Cape buffalo choice, but we're talking about a deer here..The .22-250 is best known as a varmint round so that should tell you something. It can surely kill a deer but there are scores of better cartridges for deer hunting. Would not be a good feeling at all having a deer get away wounded and then you wondering if maybe you should have used a more potent round.
We’re holding off on the deer shooting until next season. We’re still practicing. Currently using the Hornady Varmint Express .22-250 55 Grain. They’re showing good groups.What did you end up using for factory ammo? What were your results? My mom used a 22-250 for whitetails back in the day. We reloaded hornady 55gr sp at 3600 fps for her and she never lost a deer or antelope. That bullet placed in the armpit was devastating on deer and usually gave an exit. It was actually a really good midrange round when using the MPBR method. Hold dead on out to 300.