What does “splash” mean? You’ve shot high shoulder through/into the spine and the animals didn’t fall?
Correct, 6.5 prc 147 225 yards
They don’t require multiple shots to anchor them in a reasonable distance. You shoot them through the spine, or near it- with any of them and they drop. Elk shot through both scapulas where the temporary cavity affects the spine, drop with every caliber.
You’ve lost elk shot through the lungs with “small rounds”? But haven’t lost elk shot through the lungs with large rounds?
Only rifle elk I’ve lost was a 140vld, made it to private with no recovery, double lung in the middle of the herd
I’m trying to find the consistent logical reasoning in what you are writing.
Good luck
Who is? It certainly isn’t me. Over half the elk I’ve killed or been apart of have been public land elk- lots of them bulls. Some open, some in the timber.
More forgiving base on what? I am asking for specifics. Because the above is word salad. What elk, what bullet, what impact velocity, what placement, what organs, what time frame to incapacitation. And the same exact (or as close as feasible) situations with a 30cal, that impact at the velocity, same placement, same organs affected, etc.
I have filled threads full of pictures of animals and wounds channels- lots of them with “small” calibers and “large” calibers used in elk from the same herd, side by side. I have seen very little difference in behavior of those elk with like placement regardless of caliber. Bullets have certainly made a difference.
Shooter performance- that is the amount of animals/shots per capita, however has been dramatically different between “calibers”. 30cal mags have by leaps and bounds more rodeos and crap shows than all small calibers combined.