One more update with this bullet. My wife was lucky enough to harvest her first elk, a cow, at 703 yards. After my experience with them on my bull elk, I was hopeful that this bullet, while not perfect performance across the board at this point, would do good enough, and since I did not have time to develop another load, I felt comfortable using it one more time. This almost proved to be a terrible mistake.
My wife is currently 19 weeks pregnant, and I did not want to drag her all over the mountain, so we went to an area where we could drive up a mountain road and spot elk on mountainsides in the morning and evening. My cousin was along for the hunt to, with a tag. it was open for antlerless elk only. Well, sure enough we spotted two elk, a cow and a calf, on a hillside about 700 yards away. We got off the dirt road a ways, and got set up for the shot. We were planning to do a double, and fill both tags. My wife was taking first shot, since she is somewhat new to shooting, and also this was her first elk.
We ranged them at 703 yards and I estimated a 2-3 mph wind from right to left, and I doped the scope. The elk were approximately 400-450 ft elevation higher than we were, and at the shot the cow was slightly quartering towards us, so I told my wife to put it right on the shoulder, and because of the upward elevation, aim for the heart, as the exit will be higher than the entrance. Well, I could not have drawn with a marker a more perfect shot placement, it went exactly where I wanted her to put it, as you will see in the linked video and pictures. The cow didn't hardly react at the shot, and then slowly began to trot. Within 3 seconds, my cousin fired (from the sitting position using sticks and his pack frame for a rear rest) and made a spine hit. His elk tumbled down the hill., and the cow began running. I was only watching on the camera at the shot, and I was fairly confident with the shot my wife made, but was unsure.
By the time we climbed up the mountain, it was nearly dark. We found my cousins calf right away, and began to look for blood from my wife's cow, but only found fresh tracks. I followed them into the timber, but did not want to stray too far off using only a headlamp after a wounded elk in an area where I know there are big bears, so we decided to come back the next day and pack out my cousins calf that night.
Well, we showed up the next day, after reviewing the video on the bigger screen and watching the trace and impact go exactly where we wanted it, were confident we would find the cow just into the timber. We got on what we were sure was the cows tracks, and began tracking. After following them for over 100 yards, and seeing no blood, I began to worry. We carefully stayed on her tracks, making sure not to loose them. I knew it was a solid hit, and was confused why there was no blood. After following the tracks for over 600 yards, my cousin and I decided it would be good for him to go back and retrace and see if we missed something, and I would stay on this trail. Well, about another 200 yards farther, I spotted the cow laying dead, and signaled my cousin to come back. As the crow flies, the cow had traveled over 500 yards. On her trail, it was nearly a half mile, two ridges over. And the entire time, not a single speck of blood in the fresh white snow. If it wasn't for the snow, or if it had snowed over night, I highly doubt we would have found her. She died with the entrance side up.
Upon inspection, the entrance was exactly where we wanted it. We began to bone the meat out, there was an average amount of blood shot on entrance. We finished the entrance side, and rolled her over, found no exit in the hide, and skinner her back. To my complete shock, the bullet exited the body cavity and was just under the hide, all the way back in the flank!! I looked at the entrance, and watched the video again, and the ONLY possible way for the bullet to exit back there is if the bullets path diverted after entrance to the left, very hard. The cow was not quartered that heavily to us. We finished boning her out, and I opened up the inside and saw that the lungs were hit, but the damage was not that great, as the bullet did not penetrate strait and only clipped the rear of the lungs. I have not weighed the bullet, but it looks nearly identical to the bullet recovered from my bull elk. But I gotta say folks, this bullet changed direction RADICALLY after entrance, and turned a perfectly placed shot into, essentially, a gut shot, and the animal covered nearly half a mile before expiring. This, sadly, was almost an unrecovered animal had persistence not kept me going.
Here is the cow, I made a spot in the hair where the bullet entered, it is circled. Also a picture of the mountain the elk were on, they were back behind the ridge up that draw where I put the arrow.
This will conclude my testing of this bullet. I will either pull the remaining bullets I have, or shoot them at steel. I will reiterate, I am fully aware that this is not, nor was ever intended to be a hunting bullet, but after 16 big game animals ranging from fawn pronghorn to bull elk, from under 200 yards to nearly 1000, the biggest consistency I have found with this bullet on game is inconsistency. I feel like I have more than put this bullet through it's paces, and I don't know of any single person that has killed this many critters with it. There have been times where this bullet has performed acceptably, and then other times such as this. It may be a good enough bullet for whitetail out to intermediate ranges, and it will kill critters, but I simply expect better results when I put so much time and effort into my rifle, components, and reloading practices.
Thank you to everyone who read this write up, I know I wrote a lot here, and it takes time to read it all. I tried to put a lot of effort, detail, and actual physical evidence you can see into this so that everyone can get the least biased report on this bullet possible. Again, Thanks all.