.223 for bear, mountain goat, deer, elk, and moose.

Joined
Aug 16, 2020
Messages
674
You’d be re-barreling and looking to trade bolts. That’s a lot of work when a new stainless 223 can be had for $770 new.
Good point, I would’ve figured that out when the time came. Just meant replace essentially
 
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PNWGATOR

WKR
Shoot2HuntU
Joined
Oct 14, 2014
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2,744
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USA
What did the elk do? I'm just curious because I've had great success with the 162 gr ELD X.

And from what I've seen in this thread, wouldn't you expect similar performance from the TMK of no exit and not much blood trail, but (the possible exception depending on what your friend found) total destruction inside?

(Honest questions - no hostility implied at all)
Elk was dead on it’s feet and he kept shooting.

Similar performance with a 223?

Maybe.

However, if it’d continued to stand there it’d have been shot more than three times.

Guess my only point is that bullets matter.
 

Hoosker Doo

Lil-Rokslider
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May 23, 2020
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Afton, WY
Similar performance with a 223?

Maybe.
Obviously size and velocity make a difference but after seeing @sargent 's bull, overall similar performance.

Guess my only point is that bullets matter.
Exactly, that's why I was dreading the ELD-X failure story that went along with it because that's what I've chosen to use for my larger calibers, and have been happy with the performance for the last few years.
 

DJL2

Lil-Rokslider
Joined
May 22, 2020
Messages
261
The mighty 7mm-08 can still push the 160 TMK… when you need it REALLY dead. ;-)

I might be wrong, but I think 6.5 and the 130 TMK is the smallest you can go and be 50 state legal.
 

The Guide

WKR
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Aug 20, 2023
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The mighty 7mm-08 can still push the 160 TMK… when you need it REALLY dead. ;-)

I might be wrong, but I think 6.5 and the 130 TMK is the smallest you can go and be 50 state legal.
Some eastern states with "novel" elk herds require .270 caliber minimum.

Jay
 

atmat

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Jun 10, 2022
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Colorado
The beauty in the 223 isn’t just that it’s low-recoil and capable of killing elk. It’s that ammo is incredibly cheap and barrel life is long, so you can train with it year round in high volume without significant rebarreling costs.

While the 22BR and 22creed are awesome cartridges, you loose those other benefits.
 

mi650

WKR
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Dec 19, 2021
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Central Michigan
I've skimmed a half dozen pages and gotta say the pics of damage are impressive.

While I'm sure I could be successful with a .223 for deer if I had to, it wouldn't be my 1st choice. I have other tools for the job that I'm more confident in.

On the other hand, they would do the job but .308 or .30-30 wouldn't be my 1st choice for coyotes or groundhogs, either.
 

LiveFire

FNG
Joined
Oct 3, 2023
Messages
22
I've skimmed a half dozen pages and gotta say the pics of damage are impressive.

While I'm sure I could be successful with a .223 for deer if I had to, it wouldn't be my 1st choice. I have other tools for the job that I'm more confident in.

On the other hand, they would do the job but .308 or .30-30 wouldn't be my 1st choice for coyotes or groundhogs, either.
If you read the 238 pages you might make 223 and a 77gr tmk your new go to for deer.
 

kipper09

WKR
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Dec 5, 2013
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I haven’t read all the pages but are you guys shooting factory 77 tmk ammo? If so what exactly are you shooting?


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
 

LiveFire

FNG
Joined
Oct 3, 2023
Messages
22
I haven’t read all the pages but are you guys shooting factory 77 tmk ammo? If so what exactly are you shooting?


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
For factory ammo it looks like black hills and aac are the most popular but I think most are reloading
 

mi650

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If you read the 238 pages you might make 223 and a 77gr tmk your new go to for deer.
I've killed far more deer with a bow/crossbow than a gun of any kind, about 5-1 over the years.

At this point, I'm very happy with my X-Model .30-30. It's very soft shooting, very quiet suppressed, and I haven't had to track any deer I've shot with it.

Also, there's no way I could see a deer 300 yards away in my woods, let alone shoot one. If I was hunting somewhere more open, my choice would be different. Who knows, maybe I'd give the TMK a try in my RPR. Pretty sure it's up to the task.

5 round group.

kstC2En.jpg
 

Sadler

WKR
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Dec 17, 2016
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After reading this thread over the years and having my doubts about me personally being able to kill elk with the 223 and always needing a magnum, I finally bought one and practiced and practiced over the past year. This gun is stupid fun to shoot and I couldn’t tell the difference from the TMK wound and the 147 ELDM wounds on this mature cow my buddy shot today (didn’t get any pictures of the wound channels on the cow) she was shot at 500 yards, impact velocity was 1966 FPS
6BE52E0A-3AC1-4012-B4AC-E1431E4F8E20.jpeg

The day before this we found a little 4x4 trying to get lucky with a group of 8 cows and I was able to put him down right at 400 yards and impact velocity was 2119 FPS. Put the first one right behind the shoulder. He hunched a bit and then took a few steps back. He was dead on his feet. But I keep shooting elk until they’re down. I’ve had and seen hard lessons learned from not doing that and I’m sure most of us have. So I sent two more his way and he took a tumble down the hill and landed on an old logging road. The combination of a 223 and the Ultra 9 suppressor is such a good mix. The cows he was with could not care less about the shots and just walked away after he fell and he never made an attempt to run after the first shot.

I should also mention, this all happened in a hurry. I had seen the cows first and was making my way to them, bumped some mule deer which in turn got the bulls attention and he all of a sudden appeared and was heading up the mountain and for the tree line. I threw my pack down as a rest, got behind the gun and he stopped and looked back right before he went out of sight. I had maybe 15 yards left of visibility. Right when he stopped that’s when I sent one. Saw it hit in the scope too which was pretty awesome. Then sent two more and my season was over.
4182EBE1-7590-424D-BBCE-63C93E1BAB91.jpeg3DDDFBD3-F378-4B40-95CB-3485A9F7EC45.jpegECD7B70A-C269-4DCC-94FD-8A70A37D6FB5.jpeg

After this season and personally witnessing the absolute distraction this little bullet does, I’m a true believer. I need a 22UM now pushing the TMK. Here are a few necropsy? Pics of my bull. Two exit wounds and found one jacket in the lungs. Can’t wait for next year! Thanks @Formidilosus and @PNWGATOR for showing me the light!


93ABA9A2-C7DB-4159-85E3-188A1E8111B6.jpeg5E00E9F1-8402-438C-947C-BA1FCC10A24C.jpegD29D22A8-06D0-463F-9DCD-87C1DB95FA68.jpeg866DC974-DA0D-4FBF-861D-7536DA1BB972.jpeg22841166-C3FC-4A0A-A99B-118EB84525DE.jpeg
 

ThatDUDE

WKR
Joined
Oct 8, 2023
Messages
385
After reading this thread over the years and having my doubts about me personally being able to kill elk with the 223 and always needing a magnum, I finally bought one and practiced and practiced over the past year. This gun is stupid fun to shoot and I couldn’t tell the difference from the TMK wound and the 147 ELDM wounds on this mature cow my buddy shot today (didn’t get any pictures of the wound channels on the cow) she was shot at 500 yards, impact velocity was 1966 FPS
View attachment 614303

The day before this we found a little 4x4 trying to get lucky with a group of 8 cows and I was able to put him down right at 400 yards and impact velocity was 2119 FPS. Put the first one right behind the shoulder. He hunched a bit and then took a few steps back. He was dead on his feet. But I keep shooting elk until they’re down. I’ve had and seen hard lessons learned from not doing that and I’m sure most of us have. So I sent two more his way and he took a tumble down the hill and landed on an old logging road. The combination of a 223 and the Ultra 9 suppressor is such a good mix. The cows he was with could not care less about the shots and just walked away after he fell and he never made an attempt to run after the first shot.

I should also mention, this all happened in a hurry. I had seen the cows first and was making my way to them, bumped some mule deer which in turn got the bulls attention and he all of a sudden appeared and was heading up the mountain and for the tree line. I threw my pack down as a rest, got behind the gun and he stopped and looked back right before he went out of sight. I had maybe 15 yards left of visibility. Right when he stopped that’s when I sent one. Saw it hit in the scope too which was pretty awesome. Then sent two more and my season was over.
View attachment 614305View attachment 614304View attachment 614316

After this season and personally witnessing the absolute distraction this little bullet does, I’m a true believer. I need a 22UM now pushing the TMK. Here are a few necropsy? Pics of my bull. Two exit wounds and found one jacket in the lungs. Can’t wait for next year! Thanks @Formidilosus and @PNWGATOR for showing me the light!


View attachment 614306View attachment 614307View attachment 614317View attachment 614309View attachment 614308
Dude. Congratulations. Those yardages (400 and 500) make me rethink just doing that combo.
I was wondering what the spec's of your load are and what barrel length are you running. I didn't think the .223 / 77TMK combo still had that much velocity left at 500 yards.
 
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