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Bullet failure 130 grain nosler partition with 6.5 creedmoor
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<blockquote data-quote="Bravo 4" data-source="post: 1527678" data-attributes="member: 8873"><p>Are you saying that all 8 hits were bad?</p><p></p><p>I agree that skinning/quartering/de-boning an elk is a humbling experience, especially a large bull.</p><p>I will not say that a 6mm bullet can not kill an elk, your crazy to think that. I will say that only one of the elk I've seen shot (a mere fraction of BnG's experience) dropped. Most absorbed bullets like a sponge and either stood there or simply started to walk away, even with appropriate bullets from some largely chambered rifles. I have to drive a long ways, spend a bit of money, and hunt hard to get maybe one shot (or sighting). I would not take the chance with a small caliber rifle shooting small bullets. If I lived where I could hunt them more than a week or so every year or two, I may carry something like a 6.5 just to do it. But cannot bring myself to recommend it against such a large animal unless I knew I could take a really good behind the shoulder shot. I would rather have my .338 RUM loaded with the Hammers I'm running and not feel bad about taking a quartering too shot, or busting through a heavy leg or shoulder bone. Steve told me they would probably go end to end in an elk, and they did while destroying everything in their path. Hard to expect that from a tiny bullet.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Bravo 4, post: 1527678, member: 8873"] Are you saying that all 8 hits were bad? I agree that skinning/quartering/de-boning an elk is a humbling experience, especially a large bull. I will not say that a 6mm bullet can not kill an elk, your crazy to think that. I will say that only one of the elk I’ve seen shot (a mere fraction of BnG’s experience) dropped. Most absorbed bullets like a sponge and either stood there or simply started to walk away, even with appropriate bullets from some largely chambered rifles. I have to drive a long ways, spend a bit of money, and hunt hard to get maybe one shot (or sighting). I would not take the chance with a small caliber rifle shooting small bullets. If I lived where I could hunt them more than a week or so every year or two, I may carry something like a 6.5 just to do it. But cannot bring myself to recommend it against such a large animal unless I knew I could take a really good behind the shoulder shot. I would rather have my .338 RUM loaded with the Hammers I’m running and not feel bad about taking a quartering too shot, or busting through a heavy leg or shoulder bone. Steve told me they would probably go end to end in an elk, and they did while destroying everything in their path. Hard to expect that from a tiny bullet. [/QUOTE]
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Bullet failure 130 grain nosler partition with 6.5 creedmoor
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