I'd say have your 204 loving buddy strap on a GoPro and do a ground stock, maybe in some thick stuff as it would make for an interesting watch on Youtube fails. Anyone who talks this kind trash has not seen what a properly loaded 45-70 can do. We have always ran a 405gr gas check, hard cast, RCBS style @ around 1650fps and when you hit something, it looks as if you dropped a cement truck on top of them. A buddy of mine shot an adult bull moose on a full out run with this load a couple years ago and when the bullet made contact, the bull stopped like he ran into a cement wall. As for penetration, it was in and out. Went in the left side shoulder and out the right shoulder then through a 7" tree on the off side. Unless you have seen in in person, you will not understand how effective the 45-70 really is. I have shot moose at distance with 3006, 300Win and 340 Weatherby's, but at range from in your face to say 200yds, the 45-70 will be hard to beat.Long story short, someone on a hunting group I was on was deciding between Marlin 45-70 models for black bear. Someone butted in claiming 45-70 wouldn't be effective, and something like there 204 ruger would be better.
Saying that at the range, there friend shot a steel plate with a 45-70 and it didn't damage the plate, but the 204 took a chip out of it, thus the 204 is more powerful cartridge and penetrates better.
What would you say to something like that? They seem 110% convinced there correct. I don't agree, but I don't have a 204 either so I don't know.
I realize most people prefer the smaller faster calibers, but a 204? Have to draw the line somewhere
I set up various targets to represent what I thought would be as close to a bear as possible. Real moose leg bones. Packaged meat on both sides. Deer carcass from a road kill center all wrapped in an old leather jacket. I shot it with a 223, 243, 25/06, 270 and a 45/70
The 55 gr soft nose bulk bullet was flattened against the moose bone. It did not break it. The 243 was using 100 gr fed blue box I'm not sure what bullet is used but I think it's a game king but I'm not certain. It broke the moose leg and left a lot of damage but didn't make it thru the dead deers ribs. The 25/06 with 117 gr interlock at 3100 fps smashed the moose leg went thru 2 hams the leather jacket and the dead deer with the bullet under the hide of the deer on the far side. The 270 was nearly the same with 130 gr core lock.
The 45/70 with 405 gr round nose Remington at 1600 fps went completely thru. It didn't tear up the first ham near as bad as the faster rounds but it left a 2" hole all the way thru
From this experiment I learned several things. First use a gutted deer carcass if you intend to try to get your bullets back. Second hams get expensive. Most importantly I learned not to reply on paper ballistics. I have a new confidence in both the 25/06 and 45/70.
I agree on a small to medium bear the 243 would do just fine but what if you're hunting in the fall and that 500 lb boar comes in? Will that same 243 be up to that task? To me personally...no. a different bullet may have a different outcome. I'm not saying it won't kill the bear. I just thinking the 25/06 is superior using heavier bullets that are slightly wider.
The 25/06 fits so perfectly between 243 and 270 I sold the 270 and never bought a 243 with the intent to keep it
I won't tell you how to hunt but just remember not all bears are the same build
black bear can cover ground at a blazing speed, and they always head for the thickest cover. The risk with using small bullets that don't exit is that you won't find the bear, as there will be little blood. The chances of being ambushed and charged by a wounded black bear is near nil. The chance of recovery after it travels a few hundred yards(even with a good shot) and dies are slim. That's the main reason it's a good idea to use a large, stout bullet that penetrates and exits. It's not that smaller ones won't kill, but it's nice to recover your bear also.
Shot placement is part of the equation, but there's more involved than that alone. Many seem to think otherwise.




























