- Thread Starter
- #21
I guess the vigina between my legs says it’s okay thanWomen and children worry about recoil.
I shoot a .338. Never once in my life have I ever felt recoil.
I guess the vigina between my legs says it’s okay thanWomen and children worry about recoil.
I shoot a .338. Never once in my life have I ever felt recoil.
Women and children worry about recoil.
I shoot a .338. Never once in my life have I ever felt recoil.
300wm is a great choice for elk. What is your budget for a rifle? If you load your own, the 3.4” mag of a tikka will be a problem.
Obviously, the statistics prove otherwise. Same reason our special forces operators prefer the 6.5mm calibers over the .30 calibers for long range killing.I am amazed by the number of guys on Rokslide who obsess over recoil. I have taken a lot of animals with a 300 Win Mag. It is a great cartridge with a long track record that will take care of business with some margin for error.
Well......I guess the vigina between my legs says it’s okay than
amazed by the number of guys on Rokslide who obsess over recoil
There’s nothing wrong with shooting a lot, but many of out west who like large hunting calibers also shoot a lot with smaller calibers - heck, 500 rounds a weekend is normal for a prairie dog trip. Burning up a single box of ammo on the weekend is 1,000 rounds a year. Many of us are shooting many times that, and have been for decades.I was at first. Then I realized these guys are shooting 20 shot groups, thousands of rounds a years, shooting out barrels, concerned about spotting impacts, etc.
I use a .338 for everything and while the recoil has never bothered me, 20 shots in one range trip is a lot, and it does start to suck by then both on the arm and in the wallet. These dudes are just getting started at 20 rounds. Spotting impact never occurred to me as something to even consider.
There's a lot of guys here who preach low recoil who have spent many thousands of rounds shooting big kaboomers. I dont think they're soft so much as they realize it detracts from accuracy and the extra horsepower is generally unnecessary.
Ok, you're right. All the guys that actually track group sizes and hit rates and can correlate recoil levels with actual performance over thousands of rounds are full of shit (or are just not manly men).
Light weight
Accurate to 500-600 yards
Threaded barrel as I WANT a muzzle brake
Burning up a single box of ammo on the weekend is 1,000 rounds a year. Many of us are shooting many times that, and have been for decades.
I wonder how much game those threads have wounded because some new guy that can't shoot well sees a few pictures on the internet and thinks they can do the same. I'm not going to knock others' informed decisions, but I'm not going to endorse using a .223 for elk. I don't have as much issue with the 6.5.Forgot links in my earlier post
6.5 Creedmoor/260 for Deer, Elk, and whatever else.....
Seeing that the 223 thread is such a success, I thought maybe I would start one for the Creedmoor/260. Seems like people are asking a lot about using them and various bullets, especially for elk. I've used mine for the last few years almost exclusively. I have some pics of bullet damage, albeit...rokslide.com
.223 for bear, mountain goat, deer, elk, and moose.
DON'T HAVE TIME TO READ 176 PAGES? HERE'S THE CHEAT SHEET. “Bullets matter more than headstamps.” “Spent primers offer the supreme tutorial”. I’ve read it here and elsewhere online. It got my attention. I started digging and asking questions and listened. The 77gr TMK delivered by a .223...rokslide.com
MUCH LESS wounded animals than the same guy that can't shoot well that gets handed a lightweight magnum rifle.I wonder how much game those threads have wounded because some new guy that can't shoot well sees a few pictures on the internet and thinks they can do the same.
There's a balance to be had. I'm not saying to hand a new shooter a 7lb 300RUM and say good luck (though a lot of gun shops have) however, most people can shoot a more adequate 7mm-08, 270, 6.5PRC, etc very well, very quickly. I would advocate strongly for a .22 or .223 trainer for anyone.MUCH LESS wounded animals than the same guy that can't shoot well that gets handed a lightweight magnum rifle.
Why do people think increased recoil increases killing efficacy? All things being equal, every hunter will shoot a lighter recoiling rifle better. Shot placement over caliber.