Brother, if you can't make the shot, don't take it. I have never in 31 years of hunting taken a shot that wasn't broadside. I have never needed a bullet that would kill from any angle. I have even used a 20ga to take my first deer at 16. You don't need a cannon, only preparation, patience, and practice. Oh, and the ability to be able to give up the shot if is isn't presented properly. Unfortunately, my father is like most otheres and needs something that will penetrate from a$$hole to heart. Hopefully gut and clean the deer on the way through. I'll stick to the .243, the 7.62x39mm, and my other .30 cals. Each having their limitations and each still doing the job when I do mine.On these larger species of game the .243 clearly fails to meat the criteria of having a reasonable expectation of killing the game with a single shot from any angle within the maximum range of the cartridge and the marksmanship ability of the hunter.
Brother, if you can't make the shot, don't take it. I have never in 31 years of hunting taken a shot that wasn't broadside. I have never needed a bullet that would kill from any angle. I have even used a 20ga to take my first deer at 16. You don't need a cannon, only preparation, patience, and practice. Oh, and the ability to be able to give up the shot if is isn't presented properly. Unfortunately, my father is like most otheres and needs something that will penetrate from a$$hole to heart. Hopefully gut and clean the deer on the way through. I'll stick to the .243, the 7.62x39mm, and my other .30 cals. Each having their limitations and each still doing the job when I do mine.
That being said, OP, the .243 is a great cartridge for anything from deer on down. I wouldn't carry it o n a moose, elk, or bear hunt. I wouldn't even try it on a moose, no matter how perfect the setup. And I wouldn't use it on a bear unless I had to.
Hey All.
I'm hoping to pick up a rifle for target/varmit/deer.
I'm looking at either a Browning X-Bolt, or Tikka T3, or ??? I'm thinking that .243 would be the best caliber, but I can go up to .270 based on locale if there is some compelling reason (ammo price, etc).
Any thoughts on these rifle/caliber combination's (or other suggestions) would be greatly appreciated.
The broadside deer takes a step as you fire, your shot hits too far back and he bolts, just as he would if you fired with a .375. Now your target angle is straight away . . . do you pass up the shot on a wounded animal? Chances are the .243 won't do it on a heavy bodied buck unless the spine is hit which would be more luck than good management. Any cartridge from a 6.5 and up would work in this scenario provided it was loaded with a decent bullet. Now consider that many deer are taken with a snap shot in heavy cover, and many require a follow up shot. Therein lies my objection for the use of the .243 on game over 100 pounds . . . not for what I intend to do, but for what I might have to do.
Don't forget about the CZ 550. You can't beat a classic Mauser action.
Yep, go controlled round feed and all steel.
Except for the plastic follower and floor plate on the 550s
I too, like insurance. Especially since I discovered that that insurance doesn't damage any more meat, if the right one's chosen. .375 H&H hits like a truck, and damages less meat than my old 243 when I was younger. See no reason not to use it.
What's the price of the ammo in 375 H&H in comparison to .243?