I've been dropping them for years with 5.56 Barnes at 62gr. to 175 yds. Never had one get back up. Shot them in the ear,head,chest and right in the engine room. I suppose if you shot one in the butt it would probably keep going. It doesn't sound like a bullet issue as much as shot placement.
Not yet. We do custom ammo. It would entail you sending us your rifle and we would load develop it and ship it back with a min of 100 rds.I think your right, however, I don't want to start reloading for my AR's. Steve do you have anyone that will do a factory spec load for you?
I did hog control on a couple big ranches for several years. I finally settled on the SST and the Gameking in .308. I've used a bunch of others with mixed results, Speer Hot core 165s were good too. A-max is iffy, any match bullet is lousy. I've shot a ton with a 30-06 using a Hornady 130gr that was pretty fail safe. I'm not a boutique bullet buyer except in my long range guns. Most any of the old school cup and core bullets designed for deer are fine. I dont think hogs are particularly tough to kill but that cartilage down the rib cage can be hard on bullets. It's also the reason you never get a blood trail. The skin moves over that plate so they only drop blood when they're in the exact position that you shot them in so the holes line up. Center to lower shoulder or just a bit forward puts them down. Their spine and heart are way lower than most people think. Where it runs through the shoulder it's just slightly above center and the heart is way down there in the cavity. The 6.8SPC with the 85gr TTSX that SSA made was great, it will smash a shoulder, and if you're using 7.62x39 get your hands on some Hirtenberger 154gr soft points. The .308 is plenty of gun if you put it where it needs to go. Two of us would shoot nearly a thousand hogs a year. Most of them were done in by a .308 from 5 yards to past 600. Its plenty.My brother and I just got back from our yearly hog hunt. Once again we lost as many hogs as we found. We knocked them down then they would shake it off, get up, and run to the nearest cedar thicket. No blood trail. I know shoot them in the head. Well, age,a nervous hog, two of us shooting on the call three, and shooting off a tripod in the middle of the night at 100 yards isn't conducive for brain shots. We need to change something. Perhaps a factory 308 bullet that will pass through leaving a blood trail. However, my latest thinking is double tapping them. We are using AR's and I believe I can make a good shoot the first time then just hit them center mass on the second. Thoughts?View attachment 131754
IMHO.Not enough gun/Bullet. The MOST effective shot on a hog is in the neck between the ear hole & the break of the shoulder. It never fails. It shoot a small caliber too, .257 85g moly ballistic tip. Now, I'm not saying I haven't ever lost one, I've just never lost on with this shot.My brother and I just got back from our yearly hog hunt. Once again we lost as many hogs as we found. We knocked them down then they would shake it off, get up, and run to the nearest cedar thicket. No blood trail. I know shoot them in the head. Well, age,a nervous hog, two of us shooting on the call three, and shooting off a tripod in the middle of the night at 100 yards isn't conducive for brain shots. We need to change something. Perhaps a factory 308 bullet that will pass through leaving a blood trail. However, my latest thinking is double tapping them. We are using AR's and I believe I can make a good shoot the first time then just hit them center mass on the second. Thoughts?View attachment 131754
What calibers are you making these days?Try our bullets and shoot them through the shoulders. You'll be good to go.