Do some honest actual positional shooting as if you were hunting at different ranges with both 223 and 308. You will most likely be surprised as i was.How does recoil effect your shooting while hunting?
This is really a pointless debate. One side can say a bigger cartridge will “likely” not kill the deer any better. The other side can say the larger cartridge would “likely” kill it. In reality nobody will ever know. The same deer would need to be shot with both cartridges in the same spot to know that. One side says yhey have seen dozens shot in the same spot and the deer died and the other side says they have seen dozens shot in the same spot and they all died. Both sides think the other side is lying or at least exaggerating. Neither side has any proof. Im not sure if there is any way to prove either side. The simple point is that everyone should hunt with what they want to hunt with and not care what anyone else hunts with.Geez don't make this personal. You'll note that I appended that to a couple of questions about relative performance.
If he expected a dead deer from that shot with that bullet, and he didn't miss, he should be forgiven for seeing it as a failure. That's what this thread is for, isn't it? For examples of where a 223 shot into an animal didn't kill it?
You posted a pic of a dead deer shot in the neck with a 300 WM. That's a success. I've killed/seen dozens of deer killed with neck shots. Success. Which begs the question why his shot "failed." A reasonable answer is "hit a nonvital area", but clearly that isn't /always/ the case, so "terminal ballistics" are a little more complicated than you make it out to be.
It’s much easier to educate with actual shooting. Everyone on the internet is the best shooter in the world.What are the actual disadvantages? Say of using a 308 instead of a 223.