You want to talk about a reading education. I have over 140kgs of shooting a hunting magazines in my basement that have all been read at least twice. I have nearly every book written by O'Connor, Gates, Keith and Barness, and mixed in I have a few others as well. I can quote ballistics charts for nearly every standardized cartridge used since Custer killed his first indian.
Oh, so YOU alone can gain knowledge by reading and the rest of us cant.
Oh and for the record with elk: there is no such thing as a calibre that is forgiving with bullet placement. Either you hit them well or you didn't, an if you didn't they are going to drag your sorry ass through some hard country trying to find them.
again opinions are like #######s. I've seen a bad shot from a large caliber take out both shoulders. even though no vitals were hit, the animal dropped. A not so fogiving smaller caliber might not have done that. Oh sorry that does not exist, right
.
I can tell you lots of interesting things about WWII. I was never in WWII. Does that make what I learned and know any less valid.
Even C.M Matthews states about the .257 " More powerful calibers are better for elk"




















































