What bullet for hogs?

Vector32

Lil-Rokslider
Joined
Mar 15, 2013
Messages
229
Location
Colorado
I am going on my first hog hunt this year. I am sure I am overthinking this, but what bullet are you guys using? I have a gas 6ARC and a bolt 6.5PRC. I will probably take one or both of these.
 
Leave the bolt gun at home...around here you put as much lead down range as possible. Pick up the eaters leave the rest for the buzzards. You can't eat em all.
 
Hogs are nowhere near as tough as people make them out to be.

Poke em in the lungs and they are dead inside 50 yards. Head shot kills em right there.
 
Best not to use a "vamint bullet".

Something along the lineo of an Accubond, Partition, Interlock, ELD-x, TSX, Core-Lokt etc would be preferable.

Shot Placement trumps when it comes to pigs. My favorite shot is this.......
Think of drawing an imaginary line between the ear and shoulder. Try to place your bullet about 2" below the ear along that line. That shot severs the spine, they drop and paddle. No tracking.


270 Winchester, 130 Gr. Nosler Accubond.

I prefer a larger heavier bullet when shooting hogs in case I make a bad hit, so I will have two leaky holes shedding blood in case I decide to track.

However, with proper shot placement 6mm or 6.5 mm will work just fine.


240 Weatherby, 80 gr. Nosler Partition.

ya,

GWB
 
I recommend the 6mm arc. If you get turned onto a sounder you will need the semi-auto for follow up shots on the runners. I am vested in 6.8mm spc. And it has been a pig slayer for many years on both day and night rigs. But if I was starting today I’d go with 6mm arc. More killing power at further distance and it appears to be a round that is gaining popularity that will be here for the long term. I am putting together one now I plan on dayscoping with a NF NX6. Once the F2s release.
 
Literally any 6mm or 6.5 bullet will work. My favorite pig gun when I used to hunt them quite a bit was 22-250 with 55 gr v max. Hard for anything to live when vitals are jello
 
Recently I used an 11.85” 556 sbr and 55gr vmax. I was coyote hunting but the opportunity presented itself at about 75 yards. The first hog dumped on the spot but required a follow up shot when I got up to it. I hit several on the run and could hear them getting thumped as they ran away. Later I confirmed while watching thermal video. After they stopped I was able to drop a second around 250 yards. The others that were hit were not recovered.

Then last weekend a buddy and I smoked 2 with 7mm-08’s while coyote hunting. I was shooting 150tgk’s (hit in the neck behind the head, exited shoulder) and he was shooting 120sst reduced recoil loads (same shot placement, bullet was visible against far side hide). Both dropped with proper shot placement.

All that to say, I’d avoid vmax or similar for that use, but likely whatever you’re using in your rifle will work just fine with the right placement.IMG_3488.jpeg
 
Either of those should work well.

Are you doing a population control type hunt and blasting away? Or hunting spot and stalk for a trophy boar?

Whatever bullet you would use for deer is fine. A big boar will have a pretty thick shield and if you single lung or hit one far back, they can be very hearty animals and go a long ways. Make a good shot with a good bullet and they are no tougher than a deer or elk.

Lots of different styles of pig hunting…where I hunt it’s open country spot and stalk with lots of 300 yard + opportunities so I am mostly using the same gear I hunt any western big game with.

Big sounders in a field at night…maybe an AR
 
Yes, you can head shoot them with most anything. However, pigs move a lot. A bullet that holds up and penetrates will do much better if you're trying a lung shot, penetrating a shield or shooting at a good boar quartering away. I always want a bullet that will penetrate and preferably leave an exit hole.
 
Yesterday evening, 20 yards, .22 mag. Dropped in her tracks. around 200 lbs.
 

Attachments

  • IMG_3918.jpeg
    IMG_3918.jpeg
    634.7 KB · Views: 0
  • IMG_3921.jpeg
    IMG_3921.jpeg
    986.8 KB · Views: 0
  • IMG_3923.jpeg
    IMG_3923.jpeg
    761.4 KB · Views: 0
Back
Top