- Location
- Somewhere on the Hudson Bay Coast
Well, the OP asked about the 270. There is no magic to any cartridge. So the 270 would be a great choice. It is a great choice. As for long range, the longest shot I have ever seen on a big bull Elk was with a 270. The 130 gr TSX took the top of the poor bull's heart off at 560 yards and I think he took one wobbly step before falling flat on his face. Over and done just like that. There was a cow hunting idiot above the clearing that watched this whole thing unfold. He came down to chat while we addressed taking care of the bull. He was a magnum shooter and was sure that kill had to have been accomplished with a belted laser beam. When I told him it was the humble 270 he got down right annoyed and defensive. He had seen it with his own eyes and was offended by it. He reminds me a lot of many of the posters here. Although he did have the damning evidence laid out before him.
Once the emotional rhetoric has been put aside, a .277 bullet is just a 7mm by another name, and one should expect a similar trajectory, accuracy, and terminal performance as with any 7mm cartridge of similar case capacity, firing a similar bullet at a similar velocity. Hosea Sarber packed a .270 while guiding for brown bear, Crazy Davey's dad packed a .270 while guiding in grizzly country, and our own WhyNot speaks highly of it, but the experiences of exceptional people should not form the basis of a novice's expectation. The fellow who was offended by the .270's longish shot didn't know much about external ballistics, but that doesn't mean a .300 magnum wouldn't have been a better choice, for some people, under those same circumstances, the dead elk notwithstanding.