- Location
- Somewhere on the Hudson Bay Coast
I will NEVER shoot another animal with Sierra bullets out of my .303 again. Shot a mulie this year three times with 180 grain Sierra handloads - the deer died (I hit him good all three times), but almost zero bullet expansion that I could tell. I wasn't at all happy during the post mortem.
Prior to that little adventure in handloading, The Wife(tm) and I both have been shooting everything (deer, elk, bear, grouse, etc) with Winchester 180 grain PowerPoint's. Everything we've ever shot with those died in short order, and the only bullet we ever recovered (center-punched two ribs and a shoulder on an elk and hung up in the hide on the far side) was a mushroom approx twice the original diameter, and about 160 grains of retained weight.
I give two thumbs WAY up for the Winchester PowerPoint's in the 303 British. I'd expect any elk close enough for you to hit him in the vitals would be dead in short order if shot with that load.
That's interesting. .308" Sierra bullets have worked well for me in the past, but perhaps Sierra has hardened their core material so as to withstand higher velocities. If this is the case it is unfortunate, because there are still many cartridges that produce impact velocities below 2500 fps. If a soft point bullet doesn't upset with an impact velocity of 2000 fps it ain't worth a damn.
I am curious though what your load was and the range at which you shot your deer.




















































