How many times can we keep circling???
Enough to make it to 50 pages?How many times can we keep circling???
I've seen this argument or something like it many times and don't buy it.3) Nobody is going to come on this forum and say I shot a [game animal] with an inadequate cartridge and it ran off wounded to die a slow, agonizing death. Every post on the various caliber threads will be a success story.
Actually, the bottom line is that you apparently haven't actually tried it, you're speculating. Only way to know if you're still questioning wounded/lost animals is to try it yourself. Until then, as I said, you're speculating on what "should" be "best".Not trolling, but I think there is a lot of knee jerk group think going on.
1) Just like there was big magnum mania where everyone thought they needed a 300 WM to shoot a deer at 75 yard, I suspect the opposite has now occured. People are now striving to use as little a cartridge as they can get away with even if it is a bad idea.
2) While it is true that just about every 223 caliber cartridge has been used to kill a deer, an Elk, or a Grizzly, it doesn't mean they are the best choice for medium to large game.
3) Nobody is going to come on this forum and say I shot a [game animal] with an inadequate cartridge and it ran off wounded to die a slow, agonizing death. Every post on the various caliber threads will be a success story.
4) IMO - the right answer is probably somewhere in the 6mm Range for deer and the 277-284 range for large game. I love my 6ARC and 6.5CM, but they are almost certainly sub optimal for Elk+sized game. No matter how well I shoot them, they are giving up mass and/or speed to 277-284s
5) if you give up power (say a 6.5Cm), you have to give up distance vs a more powerful cartridge.
Bottom Line:
1) if someone is so recoil sensitive they cannot fire a 243 accurately, a 223 isn't the solution for their deer hunting escapades. I someone can fire a 243 accurately, using a 223 to prove a point is poor decision making.
2) if someone is so recoil sensitive that they cannot fire a non magnum 270/284 accurately, they need to get closer to the target to guarantee a clean shot.
I know you are only expressing your opinion, but the last sentence implies (or I’m inferring) that you think doing so is a bad idea. If so, why - and does that view turn only on the cartridge, or does the bullet matter in the analysis?Not trolling, but I think there is a lot of knee jerk group think going on.
1) Just like there was big magnum mania where everyone thought they needed a 300 WM to shoot a deer at 75 yard, I suspect the opposite has now occured. People are now striving to use as little a cartridge as they can get away with even if it is a bad idea.
Agreed as stated. Killing an animal with one method doesn’t mean it’s ideal even for that type of animal, much less others. This is similar to the point others have made that a 22 LR has killed lots of game, and even big game, but no one is arguing it’s sufficient in the relevant threads. In contrast, the relevant threads are saying why the particular suggestions can be the best choices - with limitations (distance, wind and state laws, as examples).2) While it is true that just about every 223 caliber cartridge has been used to kill a deer, an Elk, or a Grizzly, it doesn't mean they are the best choice for medium to large game.
Maybe. But someone who doesn’t believe or want to take a shot will not post anything either way. And there have been people, even recently, who have shot 77gr TMKs and expressed dissatisfaction, I believe due to a lack of a pass through.3) Nobody is going to come on this forum and say I shot a [game animal] with an inadequate cartridge and it ran off wounded to die a slow, agonizing death. Every post on the various caliber threads will be a success story.
Lots of opinion here - which is of course fine. But if you have read the threads, do you have an opinion on how a 7mm with one type of bullet may create less damage than a 6mm (or smaller) with a different type?4) IMO - the right answer is probably somewhere in the 6mm Range for deer and the 277-284 range for large game. I love my 6ARC and 6.5CM, but they are almost certainly sub optimal for Elk+sized game. No matter how well I shoot them, they are giving up mass and/or speed to 277-284s
I guess there may be some truth here if “more powerful” is the same as faster and why some are shooting the 6UM at distances beyond other choices.5) if you give up power (say a 6.5Cm), you have to give up distance vs a more powerful cartridge.
Not sure how to reply to the above without sounding overly argumentative (I’m trying to be less so) or repeating what has been said many times before when people have commented upon one’s “inability” to handle recoil.Bottom Line:
1) if someone is so recoil sensitive they cannot fire a 243 accurately, a 223 isn't the solution for their deer hunting escapades. I someone can fire a 243 accurately, using a 223 to prove a point is poor decision making.
2) if someone is so recoil sensitive that they cannot fire a non magnum 270/284 accurately, they need to get closer to the target to guarantee a clean shot.
I've seen this argument or something like it many times and don't buy it.
-People post stories about shooting animals with "normal, adequate" calibers and having getaways. Why would people who shoot one caliber report failures but not people who fail with other calibers?
-If someone tries the 223 meme and has a failure caused by being a 223, this person would become not a 223 fan, and would want to steer others away from it
-The guy with the lion's share of data (Form) reports problems with big rifles and less or no problems with the little rifles. What would be his motivation to hide little rifle problems while being open about big rifle problems?
I know you are only expressing your opinion, but the last sentence implies (or I’m inferring) that you think doing so is a bad idea. If so, why - and does that view turn only on the cartridge, or does the bullet matter in the analysis?
My post was targeted at people who try to go to the extremes (1) trying to use too much gun (cannot shoot accurately due to recoil) or (3) trying to use the least powerful cartridge they can to do a job.
I am suggesting option (2), make sure to use at least enough cartridge to get the job done 100% of the time, is where people should land. For most medium game, that will be somethung around a 243 to 308.
BTW- I don't own any "magnum" rifles (unless you count my new 6.5 PRC) because I hate unnecessary recoil and know they are not needed for what I shoot at.
I don’t think that’s what he said. I think he said that toxic masculinity (a term often used to describe the peer pressure men put on other men, including kids, to do stupid shit) is less accepted than it has been in the past. Men can cry now, we can say a puppy is cute, and we can shoot a smaller cartridge based on objective evidence now instead of the pervasive belief from the past that equated head stamps with the size of your dong.
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Maybe splitting hairs to some, but I’m intentionally using the least powerful cartridge that is sufficient. For my hunting that will probably be 223 unless and until I hunt somewhere larger is required by law (more likely) or I get to be proficient enough to want to shoot at longer distances.I do agree that shooting an animal with the intention of using the least powerful cartridge possible is a bad idea.
As of now and subject to the above, 223 with 77gr TMKs or 73 ELD-Ms seems to be the perfect rifle for me.1) I get that not everyone cannot buy the "perfect" rifle for everything they may want to hunt. If someone only has a 223 available and can shoot it well, I am not going to get bent out of shape over it. Sometimes, you have to shoot what you have
I haven’t seen much or any of such strong suggestions, but perhaps I’ve been overlooking them.2) My critique was really pointed at a few people who seem to think everyone should sell their 243, 6.5CM, 308s in favor of a 223 because smaller is always a better. They are not really different from the people who say a 300PRC is always better than a 270.
I don't know enough about the 6UM to have much say about it.
Depends on the fudds.How many times can we keep circling???
Can you tell us all the difference of the wound channel from a .243, 308 vs the .223 with the 77 TMK?My post was targeted at people who try to go to the extremes (1) trying to use too much gun (cannot shoot accurately due to recoil) or (3) trying to use the least powerful cartridge they can to do a job.
I am suggesting option (2), make sure to use at least enough cartridge to get the job done 100% of the time, is where people should land. For most medium game, that will be somethung around a 243 to 308.
BTW- I don't own any "magnum" rifles (unless you count my new 6.5 PRC) because I hate unnecessary recoil and know they are not needed for what I shoot at.
The mechanism of injury between a broadhead and a bullet is different. Broadheads cut a wound, and the damage to tissue is limited to what the blades cut. Bullets to very little cutting comparatively, yet the damage to tissue extends far beyond what the bullet touches.Did we have someone explain how bow hunting is totally good to go, but using a .224/.243 with a VASTLY more violent wound is marginal at best? That's my favorite intellectual cheetah flip in the whole discussion. ;-)
Full disclosure: I'm not even a .223 Rem hunter (save a couple times on hogs). I'm completely fine with people selecting any of numerous potential hunting options that are out there for what they do.