Maverick1
WKR
- Joined
- Jun 1, 2013
- Messages
- 1,857
“You’re a girl” - - - Said the Quiche Man to the girl…….
Perhaps….but it’s not good enough to change my gender!I’ll tell you what, my quiche is so good it’ll change your religion.
P
Unless one hasn't picked a gender. Considering you didn't choose a gender it maybe easy to sway you from either or to be non-binary......Perhaps….but it’s not good enough to change my gender!
This is absolute nonsense. Either illy misinformed or trollingBoth shots broadside hit the shoulder and fragmented stopping under the shoulder with only a few fragments going into the rib cage. I had no signs of the bullets traveling through into the other shoulder.
As for ft-lbs I want enough to put shit down. There are to many variables to know how many it takes to get through the mighty elk shoulder. My preference is 1500lb.
I have gone through an elk shoulder with 82 ft-lbs of energy before. A couple of times, actually. Probably a little different than what he was talking about, so I’ll let @MCS stick with his answer of 1500 ft-lbs if he chooses. Apparently my 82 isn’t enough, even though it was, is, and will continue to be sufficient for my needs. LOL.How many ft-lbs of energy at impact do you need to get through the mighty elk shoulder? Please be specific.
I have no idea how many hunters you talk to, but unless you tell someone, nobody is going to know your caliber choice. Even popular forums like this one represent a tiny percentage of the hunters.
As far as coolness as masculinity goes, this forum seems to be leaning more toward small calibers for coolness and masculinity. That could be there are more enlightened people here or simply people are making excuses for not being able to shoot more powerful calibers.
That being said, don’t use a caliber larger than you can shoot accurately. I don’t care if you are masculine or not. Missing faster with a larger bullet is never a good
You ever met a hunter who didn't tell you his caliber without asking? Just in the course of campfire talk?I have no idea how many hunters you talk to, but unless you tell someone, nobody is going to know your caliber choice. Even popular forums like this one represent a tiny percentage of the hunters.
You sure? Cause I haven’t seen it. And SCDNR couldn’t see it when they studied it.there’s no brain surgery required to see a 270 kills better than a 243, or a 300 mag kills better than a 270.
You sure? Cause I haven’t seen it. And SCDNR couldn’t see it when they studied it.
“During this study there were in excess of 20 different center-fire cartridges used to harvest deer. To reduce variability the various cartridges were group by their respective caliber. This resulted in the delineation of 5 caliber groups; .243 cal., .25 cal., .270 cal., .284 cal., and .30 cal.
In order to gain some objective measure of how these calibers performed on deer, we looked at the distance deer traveled. This included all animals regardless of whether they died in their tracks or ran. We found no significant difference in the performance of these caliber groups when comparing how deer reacted. Mean distances deer traveled varied between 14 and 40 yards but there was no apparent relationship with increasing or decreasing caliber size or the inherent differences in velocity or energy that is related to the different caliber groups.”
You sure? Cause I haven’t seen it. And SCDNR couldn’t see it when they studied it.
“During this study there were in excess of 20 different center-fire cartridges used to harvest deer. To reduce variability the various cartridges were group by their respective caliber. This resulted in the delineation of 5 caliber groups; .243 cal., .25 cal., .270 cal., .284 cal., and .30 cal.
In order to gain some objective measure of how these calibers performed on deer, we looked at the distance deer traveled. This included all animals regardless of whether they died in their tracks or ran. We found no significant difference in the performance of these caliber groups when comparing how deer reacted. Mean distances deer traveled varied between 14 and 40 yards but there was no apparent relationship with increasing or decreasing caliber size or the inherent differences in velocity or energy that is related to the different caliber groups.”