Some folks love to argue over semantics... verbiage... 1899 your efforts here have been appreciated and the data added to the "info pool" on the LRAB...
Some folks love to argue over semantics... verbiage... 1899 your efforts here have been appreciated and the data added to the "info pool" on the LRAB...
Some folks love to argue over semantics... verbiage... 1899 your efforts here have been appreciated and the data added to the "info pool" on the LRAB...
To the shooter of the 7mm rm I'm shooting 162 sst at 65 grains h4831 sc
in a 24 inch tikka m65 and have been shooting elk for 25 years with that same rifle
at yardages of 300 - 600 this rifle has taken 50 + animals
I believe my rifle is going to fast for a clean kill .
It coterizes the wound as it's going through . My 7mm
has made many small exit holes to many to count and animals do walk 40 to 150 yards on a good shot .
I have read some entertaining opinions on bullet performance, but yours is right up there with the nonsense that someone was spouting, that the bullet was going too fast to expand. I use 140gr bullets at 3500fps, and I have not once seen an instance where the bullet cauterized the wound.
what that bullet is not what we have been told in this thread .... that bullet is working .... come on 1899 .....
OK - time to admit a mistake. My friend picked up the elk quarters from the cooler and started the butchering. Low and behold he noticed a broken rib on the far side. A bit of digging in front of the scapula led to the discovery of the remains of the bullet.
So the LRAB did not disintegrate as I (we) had previously thought. It made it through a rib in a "sneaky" manner (not much damage other than the rib being broken) and there it lay. My friend will bring the bullet over and I'll take some pictures and weigh it to see how much weight was retained.
Kind of embarassing that we couldn't find the wound on the off side in the field or during skinning, but there you have it.
Finding the bullet on the far side can be tricky! Those low velocity wounds in the secondary channel are hard to see. Need to use a metal detector to find the bullet sometimes. I have also been fooled by bullets changing directions, or even bouncing back into the body cavity. I am surprised you would think the bullet had disintegrated though??
"Hello Mouth."Why are people disappointed when a bullet designed to work at long range doesn't perform perfectly at short-medium range? I have to ask 1899, why did you even try this bullet?
To the shooter of the 7mm rm I'm shooting 162 sst at 65 grains h4831 sc
in a 24 inch tikka m65 and have been shooting elk for 25 years with that same rifle
at yardages of 300 - 600 this rifle has taken 50 + animals
I believe my rifle is going to fast for a clean kill .
It coterizes the wound as it's going through . My 7mm
has made many small exit holes to many to count and animals do walk 40 to 150 yards on a good shot .
i have changed my plan of attack . I'm shooting a custom 6.5 x55 and it makes big mean exit wounds yet does not do a lot of tissue damage . I think it's the speed and diameter .
It dropped 4 animals this year a little bull elk included all hardball exit wounds
all dropped right in there tracks
I also changed my shot placement to front shoulder
let that bone turn in to shrapnel take out the heart and Lung break the front shoulder
drop on the spot dead . No adrenalin in the meet .
All the best and good hunting



























