420 grains, 100 yard high lung shot, down in 80 yards.
Accuracy is not great in my CVA Wolf TBH. It doesn't like heavy bullets, and I tried a lot of combinations and never got consistent groups. I was dumb to hunt with it anyway. Missed one bull, wounded another before I got this one down. I don't pretend to understand, but I am thinking the short barrel doesn't stabilize the heavy bullet very well at the powder charges needed to ensure even moderate muzzleloader shooting distances. When I backed the charge all the way down to about 55 grains (might have been less, I can't remember) my groups tightened up, but I was not comfortable with the limited range that gave me and had concerns about the terminal performance on elk at the slow speed. Again, I don't know enough about the ballistics and actual physics. Maybe it would be fine on elk. This was Idaho BTW and I struggled to find good info on Idaho legal muzzleloader data. Most or all advice I would find would clearly be unsupported opinion and/or different enough equipment or regulations that I couldn't compare to my situation.
If I could time travel, I would probably buy a different ML for that hunt and make sure I was confident in the groups before the season. Live and learn... literally! I made sure the bull I wounded was still alive before I continued hunting and shot my bull.
I would be in love with a 300 grain No Excuses for my Wolf. I love the short, lightweight ML for backpack hunting, carrying on dirt bikes, and brush busting. Luckily, Idaho updated regs to allow copper jacketed and ballistic tips. I'm shooting the Hornady Bore Driver ELD-X out of the Wolf now and it's very accurate.
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