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

Good day for the Tikka 223. 2 coyotes in the AM and a little meat buck 10 minutes before the season ended. Typical 77 TMK results. 50 yard shot, ran 35 yards with no blood trail. The only disappointment was that I didn't hold a little higher because the heart was absolutely shredded and I really wanted some heart meat :)
How did the tmk's do fur wise ?
 
Personally, I am of the opinion that a heavy for caliber, more frangible bullet spun fast buts a lot more leeway on a marginal hit than a larger caliber bonded or mono bullet.

So yes, the shooter is secondary to bullet construction in my opinion.
Wow I gues we are just trying to find something to disagree with. Well I am definitely not in the Mono camp. In situations where deer penetration might be needed I like bonded bullets like the Fusions. I am of the camp that a heavy for caliber bullet spun fast puts a lot more leeway on a marginal hit also. However I also believe a larger heavy for caliber, quickly expanding bullet that looses some weight to fragmentation bullet spun fast at a similar velocity gives even more leeway on marginal hits. However here we see mostly perfect or almost perfect hits being put into the database. It would be nice to gather some data on not so perfect hits for the database.
 
The obvious is neither irrelevant or a non sequitur.
Really?

"The sky is blue". That's obvious, therefore it must also be relevant to one being able to shoot smaller cartridges more precisely than significantly larger cartridges?

What's the matter with you? 😅
 
I think it would be great to organize a Rokslide shoot to prove or disprove some of these obvious things.

I’m sure shooter background plays a role in how well a person can shoot a large caliber. But I think the average effect has been discussed many many times here. Maybe this idea has even been posted before, but if not, here it is.

We should do a shoot to compare how much a shooter’s hit rate is affected. Mainly 100 yard drills to minimize effects of wind, weather, etc.

Get shooters of various backgrounds together, including at least a few big caliber believers that “know” they are capable of shooting a 300WM just as accurately as a .223.

Shoot the Rifle Kraft drill.
Shoot the Carl Ross Hunting drill.
Maybe throw in some other course of fire or two if more data seems relevant. Have all the shooters shoot it with .223 and some larger caliber. Maybe a 30-06 or similar. And shoot both from rifles that are similarly set up. So like a .223 T3X and a 30-06 T3x, both with same stock and scope.

I have some predictions how this would turn out. Would make an entertaining YouTube thing, kind of like the Backfire milk jug challenges.
 
. However here we see mostly perfect or almost perfect hits being put into the database. It would be nice to gather some data on not so perfect hits for the database.
Not the first time I posted this pic in this thread.
Young hunter (15). First elk. First animal without his dad beside him.
202 yards. 223AI. 88 ELD m. Quartering to us, and he pulled the shot to the right and smoked her square in the middle of the chest. Bullet exited at the leading edge of the offside shoulder. Maybe 2” of entry into the ribcage. Fronts of both lungs black and bleeding from bullet shrapnel. A mono or bonded bullet likely would have resulted in a rodeo.

Dead in under 40 yards. IMG_5078.jpeg
 
I think it would be great to organize a Rokslide shoot to prove or disprove some of these obvious things.

I’m sure shooter background plays a role in how well a person can shoot a large caliber. But I think the average effect has been discussed many many times here. Maybe this idea has even been posted before, but if not, here it is.

We should do a shoot to compare how much a shooter’s hit rate is affected. Mainly 100 yard drills to minimize effects of wind, weather, etc.

Get shooters of various backgrounds together, including at least a few big caliber believers that “know” they are capable of shooting a 300WM just as accurately as a .223.

Shoot the Rifle Kraft drill.
Shoot the Carl Ross Hunting drill.
Maybe throw in some other course of fire or two if more data seems relevant. Have all the shooters shoot it with .223 and some larger caliber. Maybe a 30-06 or similar. And shoot both from rifles that are similarly set up. So like a .223 T3X and a 30-06 T3x, both with same stock and scope.

I have some predictions how this would turn out. Would make an entertaining YouTube thing, kind of like the Backfire milk jug challenges.

This would be interesting. Outside of lots of shotgun wing shooting I had really only shot my 270 and my AR for the last several years until just about a year ago.

I got a Tikka 6.5 CM and shot it much better. How much was the gun and how much was the recoil? I then added a Tikka 223 and shoot that much better than the 6.5 CM though I shoot both quite well. I would have to guess the difference is more recoil as they are both configured identically both with rokstocks and Mavens. Just spun a 6CM barrel on another Tikka and have a 6.5 PRC that I have barely shot yet.

I would bet I could take all 4 of those Tikkas and see noticeable group size increase as I go up in recoil. Might now shoot them all in a sitting until it warms up but will be informative I am sure.

Thinking set a target up with 4 aim points. Shoot 5 round strings with each and repeat 6 times for a total 30 shot group for each with some cool down time in the middle and rotating so fatigue effects them all equally.

Of course that only shows for me not an average, but still interesting.
 
I think it would be great to organize a Rokslide shoot to prove or disprove some of these obvious things.

I’m sure shooter background plays a role in how well a person can shoot a large caliber. But I think the average effect has been discussed many many times here. Maybe this idea has even been posted before, but if not, here it is.

We should do a shoot to compare how much a shooter’s hit rate is affected. Mainly 100 yard drills to minimize effects of wind, weather, etc.

Get shooters of various backgrounds together, including at least a few big caliber believers that “know” they are capable of shooting a 300WM just as accurately as a .223.

Shoot the Rifle Kraft drill.
Shoot the Carl Ross Hunting drill.
Maybe throw in some other course of fire or two if more data seems relevant. Have all the shooters shoot it with .223 and some larger caliber. Maybe a 30-06 or similar. And shoot both from rifles that are similarly set up. So like a .223 T3X and a 30-06 T3x, both with same stock and scope.

I have some predictions how this would turn out. Would make an entertaining YouTube thing, kind of like the Backfire milk jug challenges.
I'm projecting based on my own experiences and those I've shot with, but I would wager it all that there would be not only a statistically significant bias in favor of the smaller caliber, but that such analysis wouldn't even be required. I'm not going to bother looking right now, but I'm all but sure there are studies/papers that back this up.
 
I think it would be great to organize a Rokslide shoot to prove or disprove some of these obvious things.

I’m sure shooter background plays a role in how well a person can shoot a large caliber. But I think the average effect has been discussed many many times here. Maybe this idea has even been posted before, but if not, here it is.

We should do a shoot to compare how much a shooter’s hit rate is affected. Mainly 100 yard drills to minimize effects of wind, weather, etc.

Get shooters of various backgrounds together, including at least a few big caliber believers that “know” they are capable of shooting a 300WM just as accurately as a .223.

Shoot the Rifle Kraft drill.
Shoot the Carl Ross Hunting drill.
Maybe throw in some other course of fire or two if more data seems relevant. Have all the shooters shoot it with .223 and some larger caliber. Maybe a 30-06 or similar. And shoot both from rifles that are similarly set up. So like a .223 T3X and a 30-06 T3x, both with same stock and scope.

I have some predictions how this would turn out. Would make an entertaining YouTube thing, kind of like the Backfire milk jug challenges.
I'm ok admitting when shooting 5 and 10 shot groups from different positions there is a measurable difference when moving from 223/6arc (which is basically the same for me) to 308 even. Still good groups but consistently bigger on average. I wish I had them all in the same platform.
 
I think it would be great to organize a Rokslide shoot to prove or disprove some of these obvious things.

I’m sure shooter background plays a role in how well a person can shoot a large caliber. But I think the average effect has been discussed many many times here. Maybe this idea has even been posted before, but if not, here it is.

We should do a shoot to compare how much a shooter’s hit rate is affected. Mainly 100 yard drills to minimize effects of wind, weather, etc.

Get shooters of various backgrounds together, including at least a few big caliber believers that “know” they are capable of shooting a 300WM just as accurately as a .223.

Shoot the Rifle Kraft drill.
Shoot the Carl Ross Hunting drill.
Maybe throw in some other course of fire or two if more data seems relevant. Have all the shooters shoot it with .223 and some larger caliber. Maybe a 30-06 or similar. And shoot both from rifles that are similarly set up. So like a .223 T3X and a 30-06 T3x, both with same stock and scope.

I have some predictions how this would turn out. Would make an entertaining YouTube thing, kind of like the Backfire milk jug challenges.


It’s been done. And we’ve talked about doing an S2H thing just for that.

Fact: all else being equal- it is not possible to shoot a gun that moves more, as well as a gun that moves less. Doesn’t matter who you are, or how well you shoot big guns, or anything else- you can not shoot the same gun that moves more, as well as you can the same gun that moves less.
 
Tis the reason I wish I could elk hunt legally and effectively with a 40cal patched ball. My 58 moves quite a bit under recoil haha
 
It’s been done. And we’ve talked about doing an S2H thing just for that.

Fact: all else being equal- it is not possible to shoot a gun that moves more, as well as a gun that moves less. Doesn’t matter who you are, or how well you shoot big guns, or anything else- you can not shoot the same gun that moves more, as well as you can the same gun that moves less.

Yea its really just laws of physics at that point. All else equal the heavier recoiling gun will be shot worse by some amount. At that point the only question is by how much.

For me personally the answer seems to be coming out to be a lot more than I would have thought.
 
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