That is better than I would have expected for a shot at 30 yards. I see all the mushroom has peeled off but I'm not sure if any bullet would do better at that range and velocity other than a 100% copper and even then you would have lost pedals.Not answering the question, but related. With the above note that the TA is intended to retain 90% weight, would this be considered a bullet failure? The picture is a factory loaded .308 TA recovered from the offside hide of a bull elk shot at 30 yards. Shot slightly quartering to, just behind front shoulder so may have hit a rib but no other bones. Elk ran 80 yards and fell over so results were fine. View attachment 818509
Hotly debated topic these days. I don’t think it’s accurate to say you have a “failure” when you have a dead animal as a result. It may not be “optimal” depending on what you want out of a bullet. If you wanted a hole all the way through the animal, you would think a bonded .30 cal would be good bet. If you wanted maximum tissue damage and wide wound channel, that’s not what that bullet is optimal for. I would choose something else. But if a guy likes to say his bullet is bonded and has good weight retention, and wound channel doesn’t come into the conversation, that bullet seems to have done pretty decent. Still a dead animal, so can’t say it’s wrong, but it’s not what I would pick.Not answering the question, but related. With the above note that the TA is intended to retain 90% weight, would this be considered a bullet failure? The picture is a factory loaded .308 TA recovered from the offside hide of a bull elk shot at 30 yards. Shot slightly quartering to, just behind front shoulder so may have hit a rib but no other bones. Elk ran 80 yards and fell over so results were fine. View attachment 818509
Thanks for the input. I was thinking that may be the case, but was somewhat surprised with .308 having lower velocities than the bigger 30 cals. Where I hunt I shot last years elk at 18 yards, but can have shot opportunities beyond my comfort range of 400 or so, so was looking for a bullet with would be sufficient 0-400 yds.That is better than I would have expected for a shot at 30 yards. I see all the mushroom has peeled off but I'm not sure if any bullet would do better at that range and velocity other than a 100% copper and even then you would have lost pedals.
Jay
I think you found a pretty good combination of up close and longer range use in that bullet. I would definitely consider using that bullet for those distances. Is it a factory load or a hand load?Thanks for the input. I was thinking that may be the case, but was somewhat surprised with .308 having lower velocities than the bigger 30 cals. Where I hunt I shot last years elk at 18 yards, but can have shot opportunities beyond my comfort range of 400 or so, so was looking for a bullet with would be sufficient 0-400 yds.
Agreed, the results were find with this one and an 18 yds frontal with a TA I took last year that went a couple of steps and cratered. My experience in bullet performance is limited, so would love to hear a recommendation for an elk bullet for a .308 from the 0-400 yds range...I thought that was the intent of the TA, but maybe that's just marketing?Hotly debated topic these days. I don’t think it’s accurate to say you have a “failure” when you have a dead animal as a result. It may not be “optimal” depending on what you want out of a bullet. If you wanted a hole all the way through the animal, you would think a bonded .30 cal would be good bet. If you wanted maximum tissue damage and wide wound channel, that’s not what that bullet is optimal for. I would choose something else. But if a guy likes to say his bullet is bonded and has good weight retention, and wound channel doesn’t come into the conversation, that bullet seems to have done pretty decent. Still a dead animal, so can’t say it’s wrong, but it’s not what I would pick.
Who loads those? I don't see them from Hornady for the 300WSM.195 ELD Match seems to be the top dog for factory stuff if you run the numbers.
Factory loads. Would love to get in hand loading, but that will likely have to wait until kids are older and I have more time back on my hands.I think you found a pretty good combination of up close and longer range use in that bullet. I would definitely consider using that bullet for those distances. Is it a factory load or a hand load?
Jay
Who loads those? I don't see them from Hornady for the 300WSM.
Jay