At a crossroads are diving into Form

Do whatever you want. Hunting with smaller cartridges is nothing new. Nobody on rokslide came up with the idea. In reality it’s probably the least important thing to get hung up on.

If you want a new gun, get one. If you want to keep using what you have already, do that. Do both….dosent matter.

Fitness and skill mastery will take you a hundred times farther than changing a rifle cartridge…

I posted before reading all the responses but I just wanted to say this is a great post.
 
I'm in Canada- here are my options:

  1. Barnes TSX
  2. Barnes TTSX
  3. Barnes LRX
  4. Hornady ELD-X
  5. Nosler AccuBond
  6. Nosler AccuBond Long Range
  7. Federal Trophy Bonded Tip
  8. Federal Terminal Ascent
  9. Berger VLD
  10. Gunwerks Absolute Hammer
I’ve used 2,3,4,5, and 7 off your list. All worked well. 4 can be hard on meat but killed very well.
 
I spent about 5 hours going through Form’s content and a lot of it stuck. I was previously running 7mm copper bullets, and now I’m at a bit of a crossroads and would like your thoughts.

I really like my 7mm Tikka T3x—it shoots great and I’m planning on a few upgrades like the Precision Altitude stock, upgraded brake, etc.

My question is: do I stay the course with the 7mm, switch over to the 7mm .284 162 gr ELD-X fragmenting bullets in line with his recommendations, and proceed with the upgrades? Or, before putting money into it, do I spend the extra ~$1,000 and move to a Tikka T3x in 6.5 PRC or something similar?

I’m a sub-600-yard hunter, and I’m wondering if the recoil reduction is really $1,000 better for the couple of hunts I do each year.

If money weren’t a factor—since I could likely sell my current rifle for what I paid given Canadian price increases—would that change your answer?

Thanks!

If you were planning to shoot more or were recoil sensitive then I would say pick up a trainer rifle and shoot the crap out of it. With you only shooting for a couple of hunts a year, then use what you have.
As far as bullets all of them accept for the ELDX are either a mono or bonded so the X is in a field of its own. It’s gonna do more damage.
If you have a load that works use it, if you want to try something else buy some and see what the rifle likes best.
 
I have been gradually moving towards his advice. No complaints.
1) I bought a 223 Tikka to practice with.
2) I bought a 243 Tikka to be my main deer rifle until I swap the barrel to the inevitable 6 BC (or similar technology). I really do love speed.
3) my last scope purchased was a Trijicon

I still have and will keep some guns that are more powerful.
 
I've killed a boatload with tikka superlite 7rm and 162 eldx. Great combo and super accurate. Swfa 3-9hd for the scope.

Vertical grip and limbsaver only modifications.
 
Im in Canada so its just a limbsaver and a muzle brake.

I am more worried about having the ELDX blow a white tail up at 300 yards out of my 7mm?
The right brake and recoil pad can make 7mm very shootable.

Whatever bullet you choose just need to understand its expansion for your gun and velocities. I like the ELD Ms but also shoot the X in a couple rifles, just came down to which one shot best for me.
 
I spent about 5 hours going through Form’s content and a lot of it stuck. I was previously running 7mm copper bullets, and now I’m at a bit of a crossroads and would like your thoughts.

I really like my 7mm Tikka T3x—it shoots great and I’m planning on a few upgrades like the Precision Altitude stock, upgraded brake, etc.

My question is: do I stay the course with the 7mm, switch over to the 7mm .284 162 gr ELD-X fragmenting bullets in line with his recommendations, and proceed with the upgrades? Or, before putting money into it, do I spend the extra ~$1,000 and move to a Tikka T3x in 6.5 PRC or something similar?

I’m a sub-600-yard hunter, and I’m wondering if the recoil reduction is really $1,000 better for the couple of hunts I do each year.

If money weren’t a factor—since I could likely sell my current rifle for what I paid given Canadian price increases—would that change your answer?

Thanks!

Something to keep in mind on the whole issue of cartridge, bullets, etc, is that "small caliber" isn't a single factor.

Here's the formula: Lower recoil = more shooting = better shooting.

Combine that with just how cheap it is to shoot .223, and you start getting really outsized gains with your ability to shoot that 7mm, just by going through a case or two of .223 at a fraction of the cost. Imagine going through 1000 or 2000 rounds of 7mm. Also, how much of that can you shoot in one session, before pain and/or flinch start setting in? You by no means have to hunt with the .223, but your hunting will the 7mm will be far better for putting time and money into a trainer gun.
 
Have you been happy with the results of your copper bullets thus far?
At those ranges you'll likely be fine shooting the right monos, don't over think it.
There seems to be a lot of great bullets nowdays, including copper monos...which is what I happily shoot and don't plan to change.
This is great advice for a sub 600 hunter with a magnum.

Lack of speed is where the disparity is more noticeable.

Sent from my SM-S906U1 using Tapatalk
 
Monos and 7RM work quite well together. You don’t need to change anything unless YOU want to. Certainly don’t do it because someone on the internet said to.
 
If you haven't already you should consider listening to Forms discussions on the EXO podcast. While he certainly describes small calibers with match or rapidly expanding bullets as optimal he also mentions using monos as well in certain situations where meat loss is more of a concern and blood trailing or Dead Right There performance is less critical. I found it to be a helpful summary and potentially a more nuanced take than what comes through on the slide.

I feel like my takeaways from his stuff are more along the lines of: be aware of the tradeoffs of bullet construction and caliber choice but ultimately that head stamp is far from the most important characteristic of a good rifle.

In your shoes I would try killing a couple critters with both monos and eldx/eldm and see if you notice a difference or care. And in the meantime run what you brung and practice more
 
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