That is what I am saying, that there is no discernable difference on game. Yes you have taken a lot of animals, but 7 bull elk with the 340 and 4 different bullets is a small sample.
No, what I said is that there is no discernable difference on game between the various 300 magnums and the 338 Winchester magnum. I have seen a difference with the 340 though. You really need to read the whole post - I'm not ONLY talking about the animals that I've personally taken, I'm also talking about the far greater number that I've seen taken with these calibers. To the last post add another 8-10 bull elk and 3-4 bull moose off the top of my head that I've seen hit by other shooters with the 340, and yeah, there is a difference. Have you tried all these calibers yourself, or are you just hypothesizing?
Barnes' top load is with RL22, with that powder Alliant says there is 128 fps between the 338 and the 340, not enough to argue about.
You really need to be more articulate my friend, and hopefully you're not just cherry picking data to support your posts - which Barnes manual number? Because the numbers you're quoting certainly aren't from the #4 manual I'm looking at right now, where the 340 beats the 338 with EVERY bullet weight by more than 128 fps - 185 gr 154 fps; 210 gr 181 fps; 225 218 fps; 250 gr 228 fps.
Do you also maintain that there is no discernable difference on game between a 30-06 and a 300 magnum?
As to data being conservative, circa 1955, Weatherby was likely the only source of data and he says "OVER 55,000 PSI IS NOT CONSIDERED SAFE", that is from Weatherby when he was the source of rifles (with 3/4" freeborn used as much for long bullets), ammo, and data (pressure tested).
Was anyone arguing Weatherby data from 1955. Do you think they're still using the same pressure testing data now? Stop watch, copper crusher, trace, etc?
My last elk (a cow) was taken with the 32 Special, it worked just fine.
I've seen an elk shot cleanly with a 220 Swift - does that mean that it's an adequate cartridge? I'm happy for you that you collected your elk with a 32 Special. Hopefully you waited for a good shot angle. I, on the other hand, don't live in elk country any more, and as such have to travel far distances to partake in that activity. I want a cartridge that can cleanly take an animal from any angle which I may be presented with - if you only have 8 or 10 days to play with and pass up an animal because it doesn't give you a perfect shot for a 32 Special, you risk a very likely chance of going home with an uncut tag.
How many elk/moose/deer/bear/etc have you shot with a 32 Special? What ranges? What angles? Chronographed? Jacketed bullets, or lead?




















































