Any cartridge with 'magnum' in its name.
Careful. You'll get infracted for trolling. Even though we all know it's the words in a cartridge's name that do the damage.....
Any cartridge with 'magnum' in its name.
The best way to avoid meat damage is don't shoot them in the meat.
this the best quote of this thread.

Redlich,
My .375s seem to recoil less my .338s, and are a lot more fun than a few .300s I've shot as well. I'm not the only one to feel this way.
Meat damage is more a function of bullet choice and velocity than cartridge. I'll bet that a .270 with cup and core bullets will do more meat damage than a .375 loaded with 270 grain TSXs. I've shot some things that make a coyote look big with .375, then turned around and shot another that was around 3500 pounds with same cartridge and bullet. It didn't bounce off the big one, or dismantle the little guy.
The best way to avoid meat damage is don't shoot them in the meat.
Francis Sell, a great gunman, 50 years ago, when he wrote the classic book, 'Advanced Hunting on Deer & Elk Trail" said that the lever action Winchester ('86 & M71) in .348 was perfect. Now Sell was a walker of the side hills and bedding areas, when a careful stalker could get into the center of a bedded harum of cows, all hell breaking loose when they rose up and the Boss then appeared. With the hammer rifle coming up as all hammer levers do, he was on target, no scope.
The .338 WM came out after Jack O'Connor wrote 'The Rifle Book' in which he praised the .348, 1964 edition.
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*********************************************It's been a while since our last PM's. I don't have Advanced Hunting on Deer & Elk Trail, but I do have a copy of his book The American Deer Hunter
. Both he and Keith spoke highly of the 348 WCF and I still have mine.
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In addition to picking up an old box of Winchester 250gr Silvertips
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which I'll probably keep just for photo ops, I have a line on some of the newer/present production Silvertip ammo by Winchester. I was fortunate enough to also pick up a couple of old boxes of Winchester 200gr Silvertips bullets.
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I also have a good supply of Hornady 200gr FP bullets and Barnes Originals in 220gr and 250gr. I believe Keith was convinced a 250gr bullet was the best weight choice.



























