TW907
FNG
- Joined
- Jan 15, 2023
- Messages
- 37
A good bear gun is anything you shoot well!!!
My understanding is that nearly all foster-type slugs have a very, very low SD making them piss poor for penetration (who doesn't like alliteration?).A story for perspective: two of my friends were charged by a small sow griz they surprised in heavy cover. It was defending cubs. The bear absorbed six .338 Win Mag rounds over the course of its 20 yard charge and she died at their feet. I suppose you could argue that a well-constructed smaller bullet with less energy would have had the same effect. But either way, a tough animal, especially when supercharged with adrenaline.
I carry a 12 gauge 870 with a 18 inch barrel shooting the green lightfield slugs for bear protection. But that’s mostly because I’m a big believer in using what I’m most familiar with.
A story for perspective: two of my friends were charged by a small sow griz they surprised in heavy cover. It was defending cubs. The bear absorbed six .338 Win Mag rounds over the course of its 20 yard charge and she died at their feet. I suppose you could argue that a well-constructed smaller bullet with less energy would have had the same effect. But either way, a tough animal, especially when supercharged with adrenaline.
I carry a 12 gauge 870 with a 18 inch barrel shooting the green lightfield slugs for bear protection. But that’s mostly because I’m a big believer in using what I’m most familiar with.
It is likely some people on the internet who have no experience with big bears confuse what will kill with what will stop.If you’re familiar with charging brown bear scenarios you’ll note that generally it happens quickly with little warning. There are a few YouTube’s that people have been skilled or lucky enough to capture. It’s a head - on affair more likely that not, and at close range. At best surviving it without stitches is 95% luck even with weapon at the ready. As an example to that, I don’t have a sling on any rifle I take to the bear woods. Attacks certainly don’t happen every day, most times a persons’ guard is down unless there’s a wounded bear involved. It’s not uncommon to only have time for one shot, rifle, pistol, or shotgun, unless a person has ice water in their veins which leaves most of us out. I know one guide like that and she’s a girl.
I would be hesitant to recommend using what experience tells us is going to be a single round of .224 diameter 77TMK in that scenario, I wouldn’t be confident in it holding together and delivering the penetration required to break bone and put a stop to the charge.
If there was a 100 yard shot available on a broadside feeding brown bear, out in the open…totally different scenario and I’m sure the TMK would be plenty adequate.
I know more than one bear guide. I don’t know any of them that use an M4 and a 77TMK for backup. Maybe they have it all wrong, however most of them are smart folks and like to come home to their families. If there was a better way, I’m sure they would get aboard.
One of the best thing’s believe it or not is a good dog. The biggest bear is scared silly of an aggressive 15# Jack Russell.
Hope that wasn’t condescending or TMI. Not the intent.
I don't have a ton of experience shooting grizzlies head on in the brush, but I do have one anyway.
30-06 w/150 Etip worked flawlessly in this example. I stalked into a moose kill hoping to find a bear on the carcass. This guy was leaving the kill with a moose jaw in his mouth (laying in the foreground). Knew something was up and stopped in the brush at around 30 feet and faced me.
Fortunately, since he was about 1.5 seconds away if he charged, he dropped where he stood. I kept shooting just in case, but really wasn't needed.
Not saying it's the best choice, but I've used it and smaller cartridges even, to follow grizzlies after the shot on multiple occasions. Never have needed to shoot again though, either, so there is that.
Bottom line may be that a lot, or even most rifles will work well enough as long as they're shot well, the latter being far more important.
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You mean impossible…Impressive to get 3 shots off from a rifle in the time it takes a charging bear to cover 20 yards, even more so for all 6 to connect.
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CNS shot is the answer. Doesn’t matter from what cartridge.This is such an interesting topic.
Objectively, what does it actually take? To ‘stop’. To ‘kill’. To ‘put down’. Whatever.
What does this take to immediately ‘stop’ a brown/grizzly in a DLP situation? What is the criteria? Knock down power? Foot pounds of energy? Killing power? Kinetic energy? Wound channel? Depth of penetration? Hits on target? Retained weight of projectile?
What is it? What’s effective? Why?
Objectively interested.
This is such an interesting topic.
Objectively, what does it actually take? To ‘stop’. To ‘kill’. To ‘put down’. Whatever.
What does this take to immediately ‘stop’ a brown/grizzly in a DLP situation? What is the criteria? Knock down power? Foot pounds of energy? Killing power? Kinetic energy? Wound channel? Depth of penetration? Hits on target? Retained weight of projectile?
What is it? What’s effective? Why?
Objectively interested.
Realizing this is an older post, however a quick human covers 40 yds in about five seconds.A story for perspective: two of my friends were charged by a small sow griz they surprised in heavy cover. It was defending cubs. The bear absorbed six .338 Win Mag rounds over the course of its 20 yard charge and she died at their feet. I suppose you could argue that a well-constructed smaller bullet with less energy would have had the same effect. But either way, a tough animal, especially when supercharged with adrenaline.
I carry a 12 gauge 870 with a 18 inch barrel shooting the green lightfield slugs for bear protection. But that’s mostly because I’m a big believer in using what I’m most familiar with.
Realizing this is an older post, however a quick human covers 40 yds in about five seconds.
Six aimed and connecting shots from a 338 WinMag in half that distance, where a .338 Win Mag holds 3+ 1 in the chamber. Think on that.
Let's say both of them fired three shots if they had the same cartridge. Working a bolt action 3 times if two rifles were firing, or cycling the bolt twice on an empty gun and thinking the gun was still firing in well under three seconds by a single shooter if the bear was covering 20 yards...
You saw this or took it as gospel?
Good points. DawnPatrol, any more details with your friends account? Glad they came out all right.I imagine after the first two rounds the bear slowed significantly. And I just assumed both men were shooting.