General RE LEE
Well-Known Member
Wow, you might as well use a FMJ at longer range and call it a hunting bullet! If you think a 175 grain bullet at the muzzle doing 2550 is going to do anything but poke a hole, probably in and never come out, at any distance beyond 500 yards, where it is already down to an anemic 1700 fps, your talking more wounded game than will ever be possible to recover than using a 223 @ half that distance.
Then in reality, your talking having good enough accuracy to hit a 2 to 3" kill zone, that means you need .5" at 500 yards from that load, with absolute perfect doping and execution with no human error from the hunter??
Take that to 600 yards, and even if the hunter was super human and could execute perfect shot placement the load isn't capable of that kind of accuracy and at now around 1500 fps a Ruger Blackhawk in 30 carbine is a better choice if it's used inside 50 yards?? Something I know no capable handgun hunter of trying to do!
My opinion the 308 is better suited to 168 or 150 grain bullets, with fairly capable success under 500 yards. Yes in a perfect situation, and conditions, 500 yards would be a possible situation on game deer size or smaller. To expect anything more to me is wishful thinking.
I also will saying after 7 decades hunting, I would never limit myself knowing the conditions and circumstances encountered in real life huning to set out intending on using a 308 with the best loads, for anything larger than deer beyond 400 yards. But I'm not confusing target practice, with real world big game hunting! This is just how I would handle this proposed scenario, but to each their own, I just have to allow a tiny bit for my practical abilities, since I am just hair less than perfect with execution in the field. I like to be practical.
This post and you're 7 decades of hunting tell me in your mind you know probably know everything and not open to learning about new technology.
There are BC hunting bullets designed to open at velocities below 1800 FPS. Also there are ballistic apps available to everyone that show their bullet's velocity at different ranges. Also, scopes now have very reliable turret systems and rangefinders have gotten really good. Long distance shooting ranges continue to pop up around the country.
A lot has changed in technology and gear in the past 20 years.