jamie eaton
Well-Known Member
See posts 208 and 210 , they look real elkie !
What khart1988 said is actually 100% accurate. The scapula thickness on deer, elk, and moose vary by small percentages, and hundreds have been killed with as small a caliber as a .224 with shots that all zipped right through their mythical "impenetrable" scapula with excellent designed bullets (ELD-M, Sierra TMK).Whatever you say, brother.
Because the terminal ballistics of bullets kill big game, not cartridges.I asked numerous elk outfitters what cartridge they recommended for hunting elk. The almost universal answer was to us a 300mag of any given flavor. Take that for whatever it's worth. I use a 30 Nosler.
IMO, why take chances with lesser cartridges?
So basically we are back to recoil. I mean really you can't shoot a 300 mag 1-3 time with accuracy? Basically it should be 1 shot for the most part after that it's game on more is going into play now than just shooting accurate. Pretty much cut and dried if your a ***** shoot the light cartridges you have better accuracy .Because the terminal ballistics of bullets kill big game, not cartridges.
The same outfitters will also tell you endless stories of misses or wounded and lost animals at the hands of their clients with their magnums shooting 170 grain class + bullets. Had they been shooting a cartridge they could shoot accurately with added stressors of the hunt in the wild vs the bench at the range, those stories would reduce by a large margin.
If you shoot your 6mm accurately, just do that. Don't take chances on anything else.If you have access to a 7mm just do that. Don't take a chance on smaller bullet.
What khart1988 said is actually 100% accurate. The scapula thickness on deer, elk, and moose vary by small percentages, and hundreds have been killed with as small a caliber as a .224 with shots that all zipped right through their mythical "impenetrable" scapula with excellent designed bullets (ELD-M, Sierra TMK).
If that were the case, if he shoots his .22 rifle better should he use that for elk. People claim to have taken elk with a .22 caliber but it doesn't mean you should.If you shoot your 6mm accurately, just do that. Don't take chances on anything else.
If you have access to a 7mm just do that. Don't take a chance on smaller bullet.