I agree, kill as many as Bell did and things will go sideways at times!
My little Mannlicher is the LAST thing i would use for a hunting rifle unless I knew where I was hunting , as it has a short 20 inch barrel, and a peep sight to boot! LOL
However, with a 140 to 160 grain bullet, in staking distances and intances out to abut 100 yards, it is right up there wit the best talking rifles made
Cat
I hear you, the first rifle I hunted seriously with was a 6.5MS.
It was a lovely little thing, also with a 20 inch barrel, which had a full rib from receiver to muzzle, with "Safari" type multiple flip up tangential rear sights and a wide blade front site. The only ammo I could find for it back in the mid sixties was made by Dominion of Canada, now IVI.
160 grain, round nose bullets were the only offering, and the little MS shot them very well.
The four rear folding leaf sights were "regulated" exactly for the trajectory of the Dominion ammo, which was a blessing in disguise, because in those days, I had no idea about trajectories or regulating sights to the load.
The leaf sights were more than a bit optimistic IMHO, starting at 50 yds, which was a fixed sight, followed by a 150 yd, 250 yd, 300 yd and finally a very high 400 yd. It may have indicated meters, but out to two hundred fifty yards, it was very close.
I gave that rifle to my mentor at the time, to refinish and give to his son for his fifteenth birthday. I had moved on to what I thought was a superior round, the ubiquitous 30-06 Springfield.
I was a bit disappointed when the first couple of Deer I shot didn't just get knocked over from so much more "energy."
The much faster 150 grain, 30 cal factory rounds didn't drop a Deer any quicker than a plodding 160 grain, 6.5 cal factory round.
The Remington 721, wasn't any more accurate, heavier, and didn't fit quite as well. It also wore only factory standard iron sights.