Castle Rock
WKR
- Joined
- Mar 28, 2020
- Messages
- 932
You clearly stated you have no personal experience using the 223 on gameHow could you possibly know what my experience is????
You clearly stated you have no personal experience using the 223 on gameHow could you possibly know what my experience is????
Any idea on how the bullet performs out of a 12.5” barrel on game?
Form, have you tested any of the other TMKs for performance on/in tissue? Any variations from what you've seen out of the 77gr 223?
Recent events non withstanding, you could typically find 77 grain surplus ammo for close to that and didn’t have the time wrapped up in reloading. But I do see your point.I'm not really understanding the "cheap high volume" practice argument in this. The Black hills 5.56 77gr tmk ammo is over $1/round.
My cost of my hunting rounds I load for my '06 is less than $0.60 per round.
Recent events non withstanding, you could typically find 77 grain surplus ammo for close to that and didn’t have the time wrapped up in reloading. But I do see your point.
The high volume aspect also has to do with recoil. You can fire more rounds of 223/556 in a given range session than you can with an 06.
I'm not really understanding the "cheap high volume" practice argument in this. The Black hills 5.56 77gr tmk ammo is over $1/round.
My cost of my hunting rounds I load for my '06 is less than $0.60 per round.
Hello,
I just spent awhile reading through this thread. I’ve hunted for years and I do a lot of shooting reconstructions. I also did some “hunting” in far off lands for two legged prey that shoots back. I will say that when small caliber fast bullets work they work spectacularly. The 220 swift in particular I’ve seen drop big animals like they were struck by a lightning bolt. But when they hit “just off” they leave shallow big wounds that do not kill. They work because they dump a lot of energy, they also don’t work when they encounter resistance dumping said energy early. Shot placement is key but miss your mark just off and encounter heavy bone all bets are off.
Two biggest examples I’ve personally seen is my first hunting partner loved his 220 swift could drill dimes with the thing. He dropped more deer then I did. One year a deer spooked by something right as the shot broke and he drilled it in the shoulder. We tracked that deer for days. I eventually got it in late muzzleloader season and it was so gangrenous the meat was worthless. The shoulder was smashed but no penetration into the chest cavity.
second one was much more recent, a small dog was hit by a 6mm during hunting season. The shooter was a crack shot. But the bullet impacted the upper bone of the dogs leg. Made a very large wound even entered the chest cavity and part of the abdomen. But nothing hit anything vital.
I know this probably won’t change anyone’s mind but I like calibers 6.5+ for big game just because I’ve seen what happens when the universe aligns and your shot lands just a hair south of wrong. I won’t hunt with/ take out a new hunter unless they are using something in the 6.5+ range. I’ve learnt out my share of rifles. Meanwhile in the opposite camp my .338 WM has hit “off mark” a few times and cleared so much chest cavity real estate it didn’t matter.
Very well. A little less temporary stretch cavity than at higher velocities, but still very good.
When you say less TSC damage, is the actual wound channel smaller? I was under the impression that TSC was essentially the same as the permanent cavity in violently fragmenting bullets like the TMK.