maybe I should have specified realistically.... haha
Realistically, I'd be happy with reliability at 300 yards or so.Jerry proved that the bullet will get there, but with 150 feet of drop. If you are planning on dialing for elevation would be limited by your scope and what you want velocity you want retained at the target.
What kind of scope?The 460 Smith has always intrigued me, 300 yds should well be do able. With my Ruger Super Redhawk 44 mag 9.5", I can hold under a 2" group at 100.
Do they make any that you can dial windage and elevation? Something like an NX8 1-8 for a pistol would be cool.What kind of scope?
What optic?I can smack 500 yard rams with my TC Contender in 7-30 Waters. I wouldn't hunt with it at that distance, but with a good rest and a very calm deer, I would take a 300 yard shot with it.
I'm interested in doing a straight walled pistol cartridge. What do you think is the best option?@treillw ,
300 yards is easy with a single-shot specialty pistol using a bottleneck cartridge (Rifle cartridge).
300 yards is much easier in a single-shot, when using a straight-wall cartridge.
300-400 yards is my starting practice distance for 10" steel, shooting prone or from the bench with one of my XP-100's.
Revolvers are a whole other cat.
Not many folks good enough for a 300 yard kill-shot on a big game animal with a revolver from field shooting positions.
Even if they are, then you have to look at impact velocities at 300 yards, and then discover if your said hunting bullet is going fast enough to perform well...
I have a 500Have you shot a 460 yet? I’ve got a 454 casull in the raging hunter 8.75” and it is no fun to shoot. Takes a loooooot of practice and recoil control to be even somewhat accurate at 100+ yards.
Touché.I have a 500
I'm interested in doing a straight walled pistol cartridge. What do you think is the best option?
No budget really.Best will have all kinds of options listed...Budget?
A single shot will be easier to shoot.
What is more important, is what do you want?
Budget?