5MilesBack
"DADDY"
Blasphemy!Thank you everyone. Now I just need to quit bow hunting so I can get a rifle tag.
Blasphemy!Thank you everyone. Now I just need to quit bow hunting so I can get a rifle tag.
I read a few of his posts. Certainly seems like a knowledgeable fellow from reading. I would love to have seen half of the kills that guy has seen. I’ve killed a bunch of whitetail: nearly 80 I believe. Elk is a big critter. Did send an arrow through one that went another 15 yards after blowing out the back chest wall.Here comes @Formidilosus in 3...2...1...
I personally believe a lot of the stories come from people trying to place blame on equipment rather than less than stellar shooting. I have been a part of many elk kills and a handful of moose kills as a guide and hunter. From my experiences, the best bullet choice is a controlled expansion lead bullet designed for that size of game. Accubond, Interbond, and partition are my top 3.I read a few of his posts. Certainly seems like a knowledgeable fellow from reading. I would love to have seen half of the kills that guy has seen. I’ve killed a bunch of whitetail: nearly 80 I believe. Elk is a big critter. Did send an arrow through one that went another 15 yards after blowing out the back chest wall.
I read the 223 post. Fascinating stuff. Makes me feel like the 300 WSM might as well be a javelin missle and my kids’ creedmoors are bazookas. Good food for thought. If I owned one other than my M4 I might load some up.
You want to see something fascinating and controversial then search Tim Wells shooting a bear and a mule deer with a blowgun! Insane. Spoiler - they both die and get recovered.
What I want to know is - where do these anecdotal stories about eldx bullets, Berger’s, accubonds etc blowing up on ribs and shoulders come from? Do the companies pay people to trash talk? I must admit that after reading story after story about bullet failures a guy wants to cast a bullet out of a lodge iron skillet and fire that thing at any critter bigger than a fawn antelope.
I would guess that they come from guys that experienced things that they didn't like. For me, my one and only experience with the ELD-X was my daughter's shot on a WT doe from 375 yards with a 6.5CM. Ya, the doe died.......but the lead core separated from the jacket on a broadside shot with nothing but flesh and ribs hit. Both were found up against the opposite side hide about 6" apart. If this hadn't been the "first time" use, I might have given them more of a chance but I don't like bullets that separate, nor bullets that grenade.......just because there's always that chance that the only shot is through heavy bone......especially on bigger animals. I would never take Bergers on a Cape Buffalo hunt.......mostly because I'd take my bow.What I want to know is - where do these anecdotal stories about eldx bullets, Berger’s, accubonds etc blowing up on ribs and shoulders come from?
I would guess that they come from guys that experienced things that they didn't like. For me, my one and only experience with the ELD-X was my daughter's shot on a WT doe from 375 yards with a 6.5CM. Ya, the doe died.......but the lead core separated from the jacket on a broadside shot with nothing but flesh and ribs hit. Both were found up against the opposite side hide about 6" apart. If this hadn't been the "first time" use, I might have given them more of a chance but I don't like bullets that separate, nor bullets that grenade.......just because there's always that chance that the only shot is through heavy bone......especially on bigger animals. I would never take Bergers on a Cape Buffalo hunt.......mostly because I'd take my bow.
Thought you might be crazy with your chosen name and intent to pack a critter for 5 miles. Now you want to shoot a Buffalo with an arrow. All doubt has been removedI would guess that they come from guys that experienced things that they didn't like. For me, my one and only experience with the ELD-X was my daughter's shot on a WT doe from 375 yards with a 6.5CM. Ya, the doe died.......but the lead core separated from the jacket on a broadside shot with nothing but flesh and ribs hit. Both were found up against the opposite side hide about 6" apart. If this hadn't been the "first time" use, I might have given them more of a chance but I don't like bullets that separate, nor bullets that grenade.......just because there's always that chance that the only shot is through heavy bone......especially on bigger animals. I would never take Bergers on a Cape Buffalo hunt.......mostly because I'd take my bow.
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That makes a lot of sense actually.In this scenario, I'd throat the rifle for whatever bullet I could buy 1k of.
Then when hunting moose, I'd stoke it with a partition or a frame. You may lose a bit of accuracy, but a moose is like shooting a sheet of plywood. A rifle that shoots into the .2's isn't necessary.....but a do everything every time bullet is.
And nobody shoots a moose at 900 yards in the timber because they still have to go find it and carry it out.
Nah, I killed a cow elk here in PA with my .284 win at about 50 yds using 162 ELDX. She ran 30 yds and tipped over. Multiple whitetails as well under 100 yds. Most of them bang flops.IMO the eldx is about worthless under 200 yards, major problems with exploding bullets , even on a whitetail
Yep, big ones too. Look up some of the bulls killed. Multiple over 400" every year. Biggest one I believe was 455". Drawing a tag is pretty tough. I just happened to get extremely lucky.PA has elk! Awesome.
Wonder with mild winters and tons of food if they can just get huge. You hit any bone with that eldx? I’ve seen some giants come out of KY.Yep, big ones too. Look up some of the bulls killed. Multiple over 400" every year. Biggest one I believe was 455". Drawing a tag is pretty tough. I just happened to get extremely lucky.
Just a rib on the way in and out. vitals were jelloWonder with mild winters and tons of food if they can just get huge. You hit any bone with that eldx? I’ve seen some giants come out of KY.