snox801
Well-Known Member
Of course for hour distance and hand loading I'm a stickler for hammer bullets. 70gr hammer hunter would be very fast and flat at 400. Plus we all know they kill with very minimal meat loss
Bell & Carlson medalist. I repainted it.Junglebird, that's a nice looking antelope rifle! Who is the stock manufacturer?
The barrel is a 22" magnum sporter contour.Since you have time do some shooting and try a few different bullets, see what your gun likes. .243 may be a bit of a small cartridge by today's standards but its plenty for antelope you shouldnt have to worry much about bullet selection. Keep in mind most monolithic designs like the barnes Ttsx realistically must be driven through lungs/heart to ensure quick clean kills leaving less margin of error. They also need a little more speed to help them open up to create a nice big permanent wound channel. They are ideal for helping a small cartridge bring a big animal down, but maybe not so much for a medium gun on a medium animal. Fragmenting designs like berger vlds send chunks of bullet in lines tangential to the path of the bullet increasing your chances of finding "cardio pulmonary tissue" should you misplace your shot. I personally feel they are a great way to hedge your bets. I didnt see any posts from hammer fans (I probably just missed them they are plentiful here), they make monolithic non toxic bullets designed to fragment as well.
A few more considerations you may want to make in your research. I dont know about your model seven predator but a lot of sevens come with very short barrels. Theres nothing wrong with that but you wont be developing as much speed with them. Try to shoot it over a chrony and take real world speed into consideration when you decide how far you are willing to shoot it will affect your bullets performance. Also some people find flat base bullets will generate a little extra speed in short barrels. They tend also to have greater accuracy out to ranges of 300ish yards than their boat tail counter parts provided your gun shoots them well.
At the end of the day practice and pick your shot, you cant go wrong.
I've been using the Scirocco for the last six years, I've never used anything that performs nearly as well, great expansion yet retain most of their weight, have not had one fail.The scirocco has a high BC for being 90g. I don't have any experience with them. How is performance with them? I realize that I can't have consistent results and not have meat damage. I'm just looking to to reduce as much as possible.
Just trying to stir up the crudmoor fan club...As clearly noted, it's "my" unwritten rule, what you do with yours is entirely up to you.
Since you have time do some shooting and try a few different bullets, see what your gun likes. .243 may be a bit of a small cartridge by today's standards but its plenty for antelope you shouldnt have to worry much about bullet selection. Keep in mind most monolithic designs like the barnes Ttsx realistically must be driven through lungs/heart to ensure quick clean kills leaving less margin of error. They also need a little more speed to help them open up to create a nice big permanent wound channel. They are ideal for helping a small cartridge bring a big animal down, but maybe not so much for a medium gun on a medium animal. Fragmenting designs like berger vlds send chunks of bullet in lines tangential to the path of the bullet increasing your chances of finding "cardio pulmonary tissue" should you misplace your shot. I personally feel they are a great way to hedge your bets. I didnt see any posts from hammer fans (I probably just missed them they are plentiful here), they make monolithic non toxic bullets designed to fragment as well.
A few more considerations you may want to make in your research. I dont know about your model seven predator but a lot of sevens come with very short barrels. Theres nothing wrong with that but you wont be developing as much speed with them. Try to shoot it over a chrony and take real world speed into consideration when you decide how far you are willing to shoot it will affect your bullets performance. Also some people find flat base bullets will generate a little extra speed in short barrels. They tend also to have greater accuracy out to ranges of 300ish yards than their boat tail counter parts provided your gun shoots them well.
At the end of the day practice and pick your shot, you cant go wrong.
Not sure I'd hunt anything in that much wind with my 338 lapua improved with 300 grain bullets. At least not at any range. That's where common sense plays a role. No bullet/rifle combination beats plain old common sense in days like that.
Good thing about lots of wind, it generally makes them easy to find as well easy to get up on. Unless one is hunting the opener with tons of hunter traffic. Tons of wind will put them down and out of the wind tucked away and out of the wind. (they don't like it anymore than we do)