...(why do people say CPX2 instead of "deer" anyway? )...
Because it includes black bear, all deer species, goats and sheep, wolves and a few others... four letters vs paragraph.
...(why do people say CPX2 instead of "deer" anyway? )...
I'd use the 30-30 for ranges which are expected to be 150yds or less.
I'd use the 30-30 for ranges which are expected to be 150yds or less.
Totally legal in Ontario to use a 223 for any big game.
30-30 is more suited for real hunting
It not easy to find a deer perfect broadside so i vote for a 170gn in a 30-30
The 243 whit a 100 partion is a better choice in low recoil caliber
Last year, all the kids shot deer with the 50gr gmx. All deer were shot with the same presentation, quartering in, at 101 yards. All deer died within 20 yards of each other, and that included the one that dropped at the shot and bounced. The GF shot a buck in the same spot, with the same angle, with her 7/08 and a 139 SST. That bullet got less penetration, and similar tissue damage, but that deer ran an extra 20 yards.
I remain convinced that velocity plays a bigger part in the death of animals than we give it credit for. I see a higher percentage of bang flops with fast moving cartridges and softer bullets than with comparatively slow cartridges and harder bullets. The exception to that being the 45tsx whipped out at 3800+ fps muzzle velocity. That one tends to flat smack stuff to the earth....
If the apocalypse hit, and I had to choose a single rifle with which to feed my family and defend them against intruders and rampant wildlife up to and including Siberian Sabertooth Snow Tigers, it would unquestionably be a 223 spun at least 1:9, stoked with 75 Amax/ELD or a mono of some flavour over a 30-30. Reason being, a fast twisted rifle will generate more rpm, which results in faster bullet upset. Faster bullet upset results in greater soft tissue damage.
That little 100 grain pill from my 6mm had passed just inside the skin, but below the breast bone under the heart. Did not enter the chest cavity. One drop of blood. However, the tip of that bucks heart was as hard as a rock, and bruised a bit. Neither did that buck bleed out, nor was his cns disrupted. Shock killed him.
The fastest killing chest shot with the .30-30, using either factory ammunition or hand loads is one that strikes slightly forwards of the front leg, at or close to the intersection of the scapula and humerus bones. A shot in this area destroys the autonomous plexus, a major nerve center of the body, causing instant death, shot after shot.
Ironic, given your sig line John...I do think that there is a fairly big disconnect on cgn though between hunters who own a rifle - typified by the ‘shoot a half a box at the range to line ‘er up before de’r season starts tomarrow’, and shooters who hunt - the guys who buy/build/sell rifles multiple times a year, who buy bullets by the thousand and USE them, and who are open to trying new things and tend to read more about other shooters who hunt and their findings. Of course, this is simplifying a bunch, but you get the idea..... That ANYONE can question the efficiency of a properly constructed bullet and its effect on a deer in this day and age surprises me.