Congrats on the bull. I’ll PM you.What part of Az? I’ll be out in flagstaff after Christmas to pick up my bull.
Congrats on the bull. I’ll PM you.What part of Az? I’ll be out in flagstaff after Christmas to pick up my bull.
It's perfectly acceptable to say BIG PEW = more fun. Just in my case it isn't.If you are happy with the performance of what you have, there’s no reason to change. The folks that change and go bigger are only doing it because they believe the extra work and punishment are worth the squeeze.
This of course begs the question.... what do medium bullets do?? Schmack them?Little bullets kill deer. Big bullets wallop them.
Uhh, didn't realize that was a bad thing.The only thing is did do is ........ required more attention to shoot well in the field.
Unfollow your own thread! Hahahaha, it’s a thing.I wish I could lock my own thread. Lol. No regerts... except starting this thread.
Sincere question…. Is it physics that make the lighter recoiling caliber more accurate (I.E. is an equal 223 inherently more accurate than an equal 338 Lapua)? If fired without the human element, is the smaller round more accurate, in theory, or are saying that humans generally flinch whenever shooting larger calibers?This is not that complicated. There are two groups of shooters.
One group KNOWS you will shoot a rifle with lighter recoil better in field positions.
The other group hasn't tried it.
This is probably the dumbest debate going on Rokslide right now.
No Ragrets bro…. Not even on letter
If fired without the human element
Sincere question…. Is it physics that make the lighter recoiling caliber more accurate (I.E. is an equal 223 inherently more accurate than an equal 338 Lapua)? If fired without the human element, is the smaller round more accurate, in theory, or are saying that humans generally flinch whenever shooting larger calibers?
So, assuming we don’t have a flinch, then the first shot from an equally accurate 300 RUM, or a 6 Creed, could theoretically impact a buck in the same spot at 682 yards, across a canyon…..The squishy meat bag pulling the trigger is the issue. Battleship guns can be accurate.
Flinching can be the problem. The gun rocking them around inconsistently can be the problem. The stock flexing can be the problem. Nearly very factor contributing to lesser accuracy is amplified as recoil increases.
I think that might be the variables you are missing right there in your arguments…Our kids and wives kill things out to 450 yards with the 243 with everything from factory cup and core, Partitions, to Ballistic tips, to Interbonds. I think it’s a great round if the shots are broadside.
The bias against the 243 seems to be localized around your social circle.
You missed pinheads comment earlier in this thread. “Big guns kill things faster”. You, also, clearly are not smart or experienced enough to understand this.I think that might be the variables you are missing right there in your arguments…
Food for thought:
A) a partition or ballistic tip is NOT the same as an Amax/ELD m/DTAC…etc
B) you state that your kids/wives kill stuff out 450 with 243’s. Broadside shots. Have ypu ever said to a kid “waaaiiiit, just give him a second to turn…. Ok now” or words to that effect? Restricting them to that broadside angle, and cementing into their minds from day one that broadside is the ONLY acceptable shot with a 243?
Think you are the first guy to do that? That you pioneered that mind set “out West”?
Of course kids want to step up to a 270 after watching dad get to shoot a quartering in bull elk, and they didn’t because he never turned broadside.
As to watching “big guns kill faster”, I dunno, I killed a moose at 352 with an 88 ELD m this year, saw his mouth drop open and clearly saw his chompers as his ass collapsed and he went down in the scope.
Then I called all three shots for one of my bestest buddies thumping 168 mono’s from a 300wsm into his bulls chest, before that one finally fell over and kicked for a few seconds. “Where’d your bull go?!?!?!”
“He’s dead where he was standing…”
Drop a 108 ELD m in that 243 for your kids. Let them crush ‘em where they stand.
You missed what he said. It’s not necessarily flinching, although that contributes a lot of times. The main point is: You have to be much more consistent in pressures and positions with a heavy recoiling rifle than light recoiling rifles to see the same degree of accuracy. Which moves an equal weight rifle more? A 75 gr @ 3000, or a 200 gr @ 3000? Obviously, the 200 gr. So if you’re not consistent behind the gun, with the same technique, the heavy recoil rifle won’t be as accurate, because it’s moving more before the bullet exits the barrel. We aren’t talking shooting from a bench, or rock solid perfect prone. We’re talking about varied & awkward shooting positions.So, assuming we don’t have a flinch, then the first shot from an equally accurate 300 RUM, or a 6 Creed, could theoretically impact a buck in the same spot at 682 yards, across a canyon…..