I shot a buck this year at 170 through the rear lungs, complete pass through. And then a follow-up at about 50 yds right behind the shoulder, tiny entrance, exit the size of a pop can. Vitals were jello. They definitely do some collateral damage!Those are hand loads I’m shooting.
To be completely honest the 4 animals I’ve shot this year with them ranging from 0-200yrds I’m less than impressed with them.
They blow up and have core separation. I recovered two bullets from two seperate kills.
One from 125ish yrds that went through the ribs and stuck in the scapula. The first shot which I didn’t get to recover the bullet went in frontally and exited mid back on a sitka blacktail, made a mess. The first shot dropped the deer but he got up and tried to take a run. Hence the second.
Second was a similar scenario to the first in the vitals but at 200yrds. They are really violent. Not a meat saver bullet by any means. I’ll be doing some load development with some plain Jane 140gr accubonds.
I honestly wouldn’t shoot an elk or moose with these things unless at bigger yardage’s which I don’t hunt. They are to fragile. I will hopefully get a crack at a Billy and will be using the same bullet. I did see the mess they make on a Billy shot but a guy I talked to recently. He too is going back to accubonds for his creedmoor
I'm thinking about moving towards the 127 grain LRX to avoid the whole lead thing and get some more speed...but for distance work in a 6.5...those ELD-X are tough to beat.
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