303 british hunting distances?

x55swm, I have taken a lot of game, including Moose/Elk/Bears/Deer out past 300M with various Lee Enfields in all numbers and marks.

It isn't so much whether the cartridge, with proper bullets, is capable of cleanly killing the animals but whether the shooter and firearm are capable of good accuracy under the conditions encountered.

Factory ammunition will shoot extremely well in SOME Lee Enfields and very poorly in others. It all depends on the condition of the particular rifle's bedding and of course bore size and condition.

I presently have a Long Branch No4 MkI*, 1950 date that I acquired about 25 years ago new, sold out of service, in the grease. There is even still some grease in it, because it shoots so well I am afraid to take it apart and screw it up.

I had a Parker Hale custom sporter with a very nice Walnut after market stock set that also shot better than I could hold.

On the other hand, I've also had unissued Lee Enfields of most marks that required hand loads with proper diameter bullets to match their over or undersized bores to be adequate for hunting requirements.

Then I've come across bubbaed sporters and even commercial sporters that wouldn't shoot anything better than shotgun patterns around 6 inches at 100m. No matter what was done to them that was the best they would do.

What you're asking about the capabilities of the 303 cartridge is likely a moot point. The greatest concern is the capability of the shooter and rifle.

The 303Brit/308Win/30-06/7.62x54R/8x57 etc are all in the same power class when their original specs are taken into account. All can be hand loaded for better but similar performance. All are more than adequate for big game out to and past 300m.
 
your misinformed, 180grain projectile and a factory load around 2400fps at the muzzle a .303 has over 1000lbft of energy out to 500M. more than enough to humanely kill large game. anything else is on the individual shooters ability and the weapon.

500m? Winchester factory ammo, which has decent BCs compared to the round nose bullets used in some other ammo, is down to 1060ft/lbs at 400yds, and 850@500yds.

The bigger concern though would be expansion, as velocity is down to 1800fps @300 and most bullets tend to expand poorly by that point.

And then there is the bullet drop. Sighted in at 200yds, drop is 11" at 300 and 33 inches at 400. That's an additional 22" over 100yds, which is a lot unless you've got a range finder (and even then, they are not infallible)
 
The rear site on my Nr 1 Mk III goes from 200-2000, sooooooooo

Which was used in "volley fire" by one group of solders trying to drop rounds onto same acre of land occupied by the other guys. Not sniping. Not precision shooting. There are guys on this site that competed at Bisley and Connaught (up to 1,000 yards) with 303's but they were not using issued iron sights to do so - that is what the Parker Hale, JP Parker, Central and other adjustable receiver sights were developed for.
 
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