I have hunted elk on suffield cfb for 3 of the last 4 years. For those that don't know; it is very flat and barron. You will see elk from 2km away and the hunting part is trying to maneuver yourself to a postion where they will be scared towards you. The elk i have harvested have been in the 200-300m range. We are approaching spring, so its time to prepare for next season! I have a couple of options, and I would love some opinions and discussion:
1. Parker hale in .308: this was my grandfathers rifle. I refinished it last year, and put a new leupold scope on it. It does decent with 150gr (1.5 moa), but spreads 165gr a bit more (about 2.5 moa), and drops the mpi quite a bit (6" at 100m). I'm sure this would be a great deer rifle, but i have my doubts about it taking an elk at 300m.
2. Browning blr in .30-06. This was my father's rifle. I took it on one trip and I had a hard time with the long shots due to bullet drop. I finally got an animal, but had 2 other hunters claim they shot it. Ability to "knock down " is very important.
3. Buy an old 8mm. I purchased a yugo m48 last year. Im thrilled with the accuracy, and the availability of 200gr bullets. I plan on starting to reload because of this rifle, so handloads would be possible. I would rather not sporterise my m48 with a scope, and I have seen old mauser sporters going for $250- $400. Would an old sporter be accurate? Would it perform better than the 30-06 in terms of long range knock down-ness? Maybe I should look for a no gunsmith mount for the m48?
4. Buy one of those "entry level" rifles. I purchased a remington 783 in 300wm a few years ago for elk. I found it painful to shoot: both to the shoulder and the wallet. I could get decent groups at 200m, but lack of practice (due to above pain) at 300m elimated my confidence for anything far. I did get lucky and got under 200m from some elk. I got 2, and they dropped instantly. I sold the rifle to pay bills as i didnt get a licence last year. I don't think that I would purchase another 300wm. I am also not a fan of cheap plastic stocks. But if that is my best option...
What do you all think? Can i make a current rifle work? Should i look at a new (to me) one? I can't spend more than $400, but i have a decent scope to mount.
1. Parker hale in .308: this was my grandfathers rifle. I refinished it last year, and put a new leupold scope on it. It does decent with 150gr (1.5 moa), but spreads 165gr a bit more (about 2.5 moa), and drops the mpi quite a bit (6" at 100m). I'm sure this would be a great deer rifle, but i have my doubts about it taking an elk at 300m.
2. Browning blr in .30-06. This was my father's rifle. I took it on one trip and I had a hard time with the long shots due to bullet drop. I finally got an animal, but had 2 other hunters claim they shot it. Ability to "knock down " is very important.
3. Buy an old 8mm. I purchased a yugo m48 last year. Im thrilled with the accuracy, and the availability of 200gr bullets. I plan on starting to reload because of this rifle, so handloads would be possible. I would rather not sporterise my m48 with a scope, and I have seen old mauser sporters going for $250- $400. Would an old sporter be accurate? Would it perform better than the 30-06 in terms of long range knock down-ness? Maybe I should look for a no gunsmith mount for the m48?
4. Buy one of those "entry level" rifles. I purchased a remington 783 in 300wm a few years ago for elk. I found it painful to shoot: both to the shoulder and the wallet. I could get decent groups at 200m, but lack of practice (due to above pain) at 300m elimated my confidence for anything far. I did get lucky and got under 200m from some elk. I got 2, and they dropped instantly. I sold the rifle to pay bills as i didnt get a licence last year. I don't think that I would purchase another 300wm. I am also not a fan of cheap plastic stocks. But if that is my best option...
What do you all think? Can i make a current rifle work? Should i look at a new (to me) one? I can't spend more than $400, but i have a decent scope to mount.




















































