Hornady 87 gr. flat base spire point in a 243 at 3100 fps. Same rifle and load for 40 years.What are you shooting them with
Like that caliber!I prefer a pass through, and with a 300 WBY that is usually the case. And seldom do I have to track more than a few feet.
This type of argument is called "the Strawman". Its when someone uses an argument that has no actual bearing on the subject to essentially spook or shame the opposition away from their stance by causing.them to question their logic. It's a thing people do when they dont have a valid counterpoint or arent able to articulate it, but are too proud to concede. Dont be that guy.Maybe some of you should use full metal jacket, you get all the velocity and guaranteed pass through. Pass through and better chance of a good blood trail is very important... in archery.
aim small, miss small, track little.
Ideally I want the bullet to expend as much energy inside the animal leaving enough to exit the opposite side.
Good stuff here, sums up my thoughts exactly. I like options depending on animal, terrain, expected engagement ranges etc. My only concern is death as quickly as possible with little to no tracking, but if have to track I want a steady stream of blood. I hate the feeling of walking and waiting and the mental gymnastics that go with hoping to find a buck/bull (more blood elevates this somewhat), and I love the feeling of walking up on your game stone cold dead—DRT is the best. Seeing them go down and walking up on them is definitely the gold standard. Many ways to skin a buck, but you have to find him first — whatever method you use to do it.the "NUT" behind the trigger being the largest factor,"I" like the lung/heart shot when there is room to run and high shoulder when I want it DRT.
I am a die-hard believer in softer bullets on game. That is a relative term, of course. A soft bullet in a bull elk or nilgai isnt necessarily a soft bullet in a hippo or a pronghorn.
I prefer a wide enough wound to bleed freely, as I am not a dedicated spine shooter, but not so wide as to prevent penetration nor to create such wide wounding that clotting occurs.
In a 243, I use a ballistic tip, partition or 100 interlock. In 25-06, the 100 game king. 162 sst or eld (either m or x) in 280ai. 165 interlock in 308. Hawk in 375. You may see the pattern.
The extreme of this is to use real varmint bullets on game. It can work, Ive seen it. But penetration is so limited that any margin of error is eliminated. If you neck shoot, this bullet type can work nearly always. Body shots, not so much. And they are super angle dependent.
Solids are the extreme the other way. A round or pointy nose non-deforming bullet can be a cruel wounder, unless bones are broken and vitals are damaged. A pencil hole in a heart can plug and just wound. A flat nosed solid (or equivalent) generally makes a wide for caliber wound and promotes bleeding out both sides. But those wounds often don't compare to those from a weight-shedding expander.
I am a chronic bullet finder. I dig em from backstops. I even dig em from a paunch if I think they are in there (I do have limited smell).
Even with all that said, two holes please.
Not a good plan and not even legal in most states for medium or large game.Some of you might want to try full metal jacket for guaranteed pass through. Pass through with a blood trail is a big thing with archery though.
Which would you rather do or build a bridge?Ok I really blew the wording of the poll, I should be embarrassed.