I shoot things game with bullets and they die. Was I supposed to read the bullet box? Oh my...
one thing stands out here, and i'm not picking and choosing when i say this, but, inconsistency is a RED flag for Me.
A bad "lot" of bullets recognized by the manufacturer is one thing, bad shot placement sure, but no measure of consistency is another entirely.
That would constitute a "next" with me.
Perhaps a move back to a more proven "hunting" bullet would be a solid first step.
When whatever bullet lands where it needs to, and yet presents with 2 totally different results concerning the way it expands/penetrates I would be OUT.
Too many other choices available.
Lengthwise through a whitetail doe at 500 yards. Lapua 155 g Silver Scenar started at 2850 fps. My son found it on the ground behind her, and within two feet.View attachment 550298
I couldn't agree with you more.Never under stood one thing if they want you hunting with 'hunting bullets' why don't they duplicate the weight and BC of the target bullet?
You train with a 208gr ELDM in a 300 wm. And dial in your rangefinder and scope, now find ann exact equivalent in an ELDX for a 6-700 yard shoot.
I'm just sayin.
This is something that I bring up when the weekly subject of bullet performance comes back around. You cannot label bullets together, even if they share the same name. A 7mm 139 gr SST and 225 grain .338 SST only share a name, two different animals. The same thing applies to other bullets, target or not (like Matchkings). I've shot deer with 7mm, .30 & .338 cal Matchkings in a multitude of different scenarios and, while others like them, I didn't like the inconsistent terminal performance I received with all but the .338's. The 300 grain Matchkings have given me excellent performance from close to extremely far on deer and elk, and as stated earlier, it's one of my favorites. A good friend and fellow member (who hasn't posted for quite a while) has used the 250 grainers for many years with the same outcome.there can be a big difference in bullet performance in certain calibers and weights.
If you can't kill the animal @ 50yds, you can't kill them at 1000yds.