For the folks who are saying that you will loose no meat with a well placed rib shot.
I've seen where the bullet goes into the ribs. Hits both lungs. Fragments all to hell and goes into the shoulder AND even into lower parts like the loins.
Drops them like a stone but can mess them up despite great shooting.
There is no guarantee that if you body shot them. Even when you're side on and have a good shot that you'll not bugger meat up.
Unless you use a cannon and the bullet does not spend all it's energy in the animal. It just pops through and does not expand at all.
Not saying neck is better but just my comment.
I agree with you about no guarantee of less meat damage on a body shot, but that can play both ways.
I shot a cow moose several years ago in the neck, it was a "perfect" shot. Shattered the spine she hit the ground dead. I was thrilled, nice young cow, NO meat damage, I thought.
When we started skin her out I noticed ALOT of hemoraging along the back straps. I happened to be hunting with a buddy who is an ER doctor, he figured that the hydrostatic shockwave of a 250 gr bullet hitting dead center of the spine travelled along the spine and basically turned all the surronding tissue to jello. Needless to say loosing all of the best meat to damage was upsetting.
I have only experienced this once, but thought I would share it.
I typically shoot most "for meat" game at the juction of head and neck but with ALOT more gun than a 243. To date luck seems to have prevailed and nothing has ever gotten back up, but as others have stated in time I am sure 1 will.
That being said occasionally things occur that suprise us all. I braodside shot a muley doe a few years back with my 50BMG. Everyone knows "a 50 will kill anything dead on the spot", well I am here to say WRONG.
We found blood and lung tissue galore, but she took off on the run down a coulee. We did finally find her remains 2 days of searching later and nearly 3 miles from where the shot was taken, missing 2 ribs and 50% of her lungs.
It would seem that 3 miles for us bipeds is a long distance, but apparently not for a muley on a mission.
It is easy for everyone to judge and say that 1 shot placement is better than another, statisticly 1 is probably better to shoot for heart and lungs, but as I found out the only real guarantees seem to be hunting at Safeway.