I wouldn't worry about the exit hole, you'll never see it.
Either caliber would be fine.
Either would do... I would choose the .358 and, as Dogleg says, "ditch the TSX." On bears you will get a quicker happy ending with a cup & core RN or SP
This, spring bear is scragily.
What style hunting are you doing? Walking and stalking or baiting?
My go to is a Win 94 30-30 with the cheap 170 PPs. I hunt over a bait though, shots are about 15 yards, and they always get 2. Not just because it's fun, I hate tracking bear. I've hunted with the ole "1 shot, 1 kill" guys before and always asked "why didn't you hit em again?" ..".Well I thought I hit em good" ..."You want to go in there & get em?...thought not". Tracking in the daylight through the thick sh!t really sucks, never mind at night. And I'm usually the dummy up front!
Either choice is fine but I'd say hammer em twice!...lol
Break a bears front shoulders they only go down
But it is a messy cleaning job... I always put one through the lungs and let them run... they don't go far in the 5-10 seconds they have before the O2 runs out... and that is the shot we always recommended for clients, regardless of what they were shooting.
Ive had several buddies bears run into thick swamps and down steep rocky ravines. I prefer to anchor them where they are if i can. A few more minutes at the cleaning table is easier than a few hours recovery especially during black fly season
To each their own
One through the lungs is not a few hours of recovery unless you are hunting in the Rockies... 95% of the time it is under 50 yards, even with archery... based on about 300 bears for myself and for clients over a 30 year span... but as you say, to each their own.
.... Now a bigger bear was shot by another hunter at our camp with a 30-06 Hornady SST 180gr. This was a shoulder shot; Bullet exploded on the bone and detonated everywhere. Flattened the bear but didn't kill it; A second shot was required a couple minutes later to finish the job.




























