Kimber7man
WKR
Hell I’m just gonna start with the loads I kept from my Beanland and see how those fly
Thanks what is the COAL on that round?For perspective, here’s a 162 with the bullet seated at approximately the boattail/shoulder junction in an L mag and an M mag.
Here you go…Thanks what is the COAL on that round?
The 120BT grouped really well in mine over Varget. Do you have any experience with this bullet on elk? Anecdotal comments and some detailed kills from a fella on LRH say they're excellent on elk, but Nosler does not recommend, instead pointing a guy at partitions and accubonds.Nice work on the best wild venison known to mankind! I personally have no use for SST's in any caliber for the reasons you listed. You'll love the 120 BT performance.
I personally do not, just on game up through aoudad size including some nice big mature rams. There was a guy over on 24HCF, outdoor writer S Timms IIRC that reportedly killed numerous elk and a few moose with the 120 BT. I wouldn't be surprised though, as it is a really tough, accurate bullet.The 120BT grouped really well in mine over Varget. Do you have any experience with this bullet on elk? Anecdotal comments and some detailed kills from a fella on LRH say they're excellent on elk, but Nosler does not recommend, instead pointing a guy at partitions and accubonds.
One bad shot placement into "no man's land", as it's called. Close enough to CNS to temporarily paralyze, but don't hit vitals.My kids got 4 more whitetail deer and an axis deer with their 7mm-08 rifles last weekend in Texas. I am switching bullets though. They have been using Hornady custom lite 120sst which have been fine on whitetail and even their mule deer, but my daughter shot an axis deer in the high shoulder and it dropped, rolled on the ground, got up and ran into the thick brush. We were bummed. Not a drop of blood. We searched for a while, but never found it. I’m guessing that sst blew up or something. They have been pretty decent so far. I have 120 nbts and 120 ttsx to start reloading for them.
First picture is looking through the exit and entrance on an 80 lb (gutted) doe after the shoulders were removed. It literally put a 2-3” hole through the entire chest cavity. One shoulder was completely shattered. Second is exit on my son’s 60 lb axis after the shoulder was removed. Great blood trails on 3 deer, 2 dropped where they stood, 1 dropped and then got away.