Wyobohunter
WKR
- Joined
- Dec 23, 2021
- Messages
- 1,583
No, I wouldn’t. Not saying it can’t or shouldn’t be done. It depends on the cartridge, bullet and velocity. For me the minimum I’d use on any adult elk is about .277 caliber 140 grain bullet starting about 2,900 fps. That happens to be (roughly) 270 Winchester territory. This is assuming good bullet design. His 140 grain .264 caliber bullet would be a great choice given the correct bullet and cartridge.So you wouldn’t use a 6mm or 6.5mm on cow elk?
Op,
I’d take the 6.5 over the 308 just due to bullet drop on the 308. Makes range estimation more critical.
I’ve watched both kill cow elk. They died about the same as far as I could tell.
I’d say your statement isn’t necessarily true. It depends on what .308 cartridge vs what 6.5mm cartridge. I’d bet good money that a 300 RUM generally shoots flatter than a 6.5 CM. Not that I’m against the 6.5 CM so long as the OP understands it’s limitations along with his own. Know your capabilities, know how your bullet should perform at different velocities and set your max range based on those limitations. I’d check the expansion velocity of that 140 gr partition and run the load through a ballistics calculator to figure max range. Then understand that that max range is likely under ideal conditions. He also needs to make sure he can make good shots at that range. Let me see if I can pull something up for an example…
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