.22 bullets in .308 sabots

When I was a lot younger I couldn't afford a dedicated varmint rifle. The Remington sabot 22/30-06 had rocket like velocity and was cheaper than a new rifle. Paid the blood money for a box of the fancy rocket bullets and went to the range. Wasn't looking for MOA at two thousand yards, just something out to maybe three hundred. Well I wasted a couple of days trying to get them on paper. Best I could do at a hundred was minute of foot. Not only did they not shoot, the made a gooey, sticky mess of my barrel. Didn't try again and started saving for a dedicated varmint rifle.
 
I still remember the Remington "accelerator " in 30-06 and .308. Was kind of a flash in the pan. I always thought the accuracy would be questionable, bt it would be untraceable for forensics.
 
I did use a bunch of the 110's and the 125's. My problem was with performance and ricocheting bullets. Neither of the two "varmint" bullets were as frangible as a 55 grain 22 caliber bullet. Although I was always aware of my backstop I just didn't like the fact that once that bullet passed through an animal, I didn't know where the bullet would end up.
 
We had a young man join our youth hunt a couple years ago. He showed up with his grandfathers 742 '06 with a box of the old Remington Saboted ammo. I tried to convince him not to use them and we would sight his rifle in with 150gr ammo I had.

All I could think of was a wounded animal if he happen to connect. Since he was too young (14 yo) to hunt alone, one of our guys took him out.
The plan was to back him up with a 308 in case he connected.

He got an opportunity on a nice 8 point buck, connected at 80 yards. Dropped him like a ton of bricks. We were all shocked and happy for him.

So they do work, not something I would ever be interested in. But the proof is in the pudding.
I'm surprised the rounds would cycle the autoloader's action. They generally don't have much recoil as the payload is 1/3 of a normal .308 projectile. That said, I'm not surprised that it dumped the deer at 80 yards. The speed of the bullet rivals a .220 Swift, and 80 yards is ....well, 80 yards. My objective is to get a 2" group at 100 yards. Then it will be good enough for coyote hunting the way we do it with a call. All shots are within 100 yards.
 

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