Hunting with FMJ ammo in Ontario

its legal but not a good idea although I have seen what a mk7 ball would do to a deer. considering its illegal in most of Ontario to hunt with anything over .275" I don't think many will be using x39 ball for coyote anytime soon
 
its legal but not a good idea although I have seen what a mk7 ball would do to a deer. considering its illegal in most of Ontario to hunt with anything over .275" I don't think many will be using x39 ball for coyote anytime soon

Just fyi, it's actually illegal to hunt with anything over.275 in a very small part of ontario. If i remember correctly it is only in a dozen or 2 counties in south western ontario. In the other 97% of the province you can use whatever caliber you'd like providing there is a rifle season for big game.

end derail\
 
The .303 FMJ round has a light front part (either wood or aluminum beneath the jacket) to cause the bullet to tumble.
This was to get around the Hague convention regarding soft points in war.
I havent used them on game (I am in BC were FMJ is banned for big game), but it wouldnt surprise me if a .303 FMJ came out of the animal sideways.
 
Last edited:
Military bullets tend to have a long nose, so even without an aluminum of wood filler in the nose section, the shank has sufficient weight to cause the bullet to swap ends once it impacts denser than air target medium. The whole modern FMJ military bullets have a cannelure near the base of the bullet, but when the cannelure of a military FMJ is located mid shank, it sufficiently weakens the jacket that the bullet can spit in two, as the bullet swaps ends. At one time I had a collection of 150 gr FMJ .30/06 bullets that I recovered from a snow bank; these that had the nose section bent around, alongside the shank.

A non-expaning big game solid, either mono-metal or steel jacketed, is another matter entirely. Provided these have parallel sides and a flat or hemispherical nose, they kill game of all sizes very well. The Barnes small caliber pointed solids are designed to shoot fur bearing animals with minimum damage to the pelt. The light density and small dimensions of these animals probably doesn't give the bullet time to swap ends, but these bullets would produce miserable performance on big game. Drill a hole through the boat-tail for the thread, and they'd make a dandy needle.
 
The .303 FMJ round has a light front part (either wood or aluminum beneath the jacket) to cause the bullet to tumble.
This was to get around the Hague convention regarding soft points in war.
I havent used them on game (I am in BC were FMJ is banned for big game), but it wouldnt surprise me if a .303 FMJ came out of the animal sideways.

it works as intended ;) it wad a good heart lung shot with a elongated exit wound
 
Back
Top Bottom