I like it. To me it sits at the top end of 30-06 loads, recoil isn't bad. I used a 340 Wby and an 8 Rem Mag a lot more though. - dan
When you see a really big black bear dropped cleanly with a .223 and TSX bullets, or a really big moose/elk drop at 300 yards from a 7-08 and a TTSX bullet...Well, why do we still need to blah blah blah about cartridges that much? Good bullet, right place, it always wins![]()
Are the lakes in BC open for trolling season already?![]()
... why do we still need to blah blah blah about cartridges that much?
338WM was the most commonly available ammo chambered in inexpensive rifles in its power range. For non-boutique caliber snobs it's the easiest option. Hard to rationalize a 375 for hunting NA when you have a 338WM. I have both, but this is gun nutz. If you have a taste for multiple classic cars you might not drive a Hyndai to work, but the person who works next to you certainly is well served by one. Dodge Caravans get slagged a lot. Mine does a fine job.
Cool story. Bella Twin is legendary
![]()
![]()
![]()
I don't buy it (based on my experience)
A 338 win mag is perfect medium range big game calibre, and when compared to a 340, less powder, recoil and still plenty enough SD/speed to burn through all NA animals with a well constructed bullet. I would say if your wounding/tracking animals with a 338 win mag, it is fair to say that you be in the same situation with any other calibre, bigger or smaller. Its not like its some sort of unique circumstance where a 200 plus grain bullet bounces off, turns around or doesn't perform on game just because it came out of a 338 win mag case.
And just what is that experience, pray tell.........I have successfully hunted and taken game with both larger and smaller calibers and cartridges, so it is not my shooting as you insinuate. I quite handily shoot 375s and 416s with great aplomb and many 1 shot flops, as well as my 340 so obviously it is not my shooting, the cartridge is flawed and does not kill like it should..........period. I can assemble a herd of guys I know who have tried it and all found it lacking in it's ability to anchor and kill game as it's paper ballistics says it should. I can also assemble a herd of guys who will tell stories of how the 350 RM kills all out of proportion to it's paper ballistics. What the paper and tables say is not necessarily what happens when taken afield and used on actual animals.
OK. Please do.
Not a firm believer in MV as our friend.
My 338 now launches 240 grain Northforks at 2650 FPS and I'll not hesitate to use it anywhere in North America or Africa (if allowed)
Put it in the right spot and stuff dies........faster.....gooder.
A 300 WM will push 220gr at 2850 easy. And 240 Woodleighs at 2600. It's sort of a wash.
But again, these days bullets are the real champion with the .284-.338 calibers. I've seen a really nice big coastal BC grizzly go down hard with a 160gr Barnes bullet. Tough to argue anything bigger or heavier would have worked better.
Good bullet, right place..you know![]()
After some thought on why this cartridge is lightning for some hunters and an abysmal failure for others, it has dawned on me that the differences are probably due to ranges at which game was taken. I'm sure the 338 is quite a capable cartridge at under 200 mtrs and has done what some on here say it has. However my experience has been with it at somewhat longer distances, not ridiculous but out to 400 or so mtrs, which I consider realistic hunting ranges. I can assure you that past 250 mtrs the 338s killing capability does not come close to my 300 Wby with 200 ABs nor my 340 using any bullet from 225-275 gns.
Anyone who says that velocity has nothing to do with how well a bullet kills has not shot very much game. There is a very distinct difference in reaction to a hit at 200 mtrs from a 180 gn 30-06 and a hit in more or less the same place with the same bullet from a 300 Wby. The same can be said of the 338 and 340, having used both I can tell you very few cartridges kill as well as a 340 Wby out to 400 mtrs on thin skinned game. The reaction to the bullet impact is something to behold, it is truly a devastating cartridge on game. I have shot bears, caribou and goats with my 340s, and not once have I ever had to track or even look from where they stood at the shot.
So I guess if one uses the 338 at bow ranges or even 45-70 ranges then maybe it is Thor's Hammer, but I can say from experience that past 250 mtrs it leaves a lot to be desired and is no where near as effective as a 300 WM or 300 Wby both of which I have extensive experience with and isn't even in the same class as the 340.
Buddy who quided for several years and used a .338 himself..
He and his american clients that used a .338 preffered the 210 gr.
Not scientific?? But a balance between speed and weight..




























