Hi Guys,
I am looking to pick your brains about what is the flattest shooting, lowest recoil but still suitable for moose round? I presently have a Tikka T3 Lite in .308 and for all I know that may meet those criteria. Having said that I am thinking of upgrading to a Sako85 and before I decide on a caliber I thought I should check here. I want something that will be comfortable to shoot at the range as I am a great believer in getting lots of practice. I had the same rifle in .300 WinMag but it wasn't any fun and switched to .308.
Wow... I'm amazed 7 pages of replays and nobody got it right.
No offense please...
We just try to help a fellow members here...
1st. - Nobody asked how far away is expecting to shoot the moose
2nd - any caliber will do the job at shorter range (up to 2-300 yards)
As soon you push the distance - a lot of small caliber will NOT do the job done...
For moose /big game you need 1400flb energy and 1800fps or 1500fps speed to open reliable
Preferable 180gr minimum weight bullet SMK or Berger OTM
Using a ballistics software will give you the maximum distance what you can achieve this speeds.
Based on the energy and speed you can choose the RIGHT caliber to do the job done.
Any 7rm loaded with 180gr Berger OTM or 180gr SMK at 2900-3000 fps will get you at 800yards for a MOOSE
If you are planning to go further 800-1200yards - you will need to step up to 300WM, Or 300WSM or 300RUM using 240gr SMK
If you are really pushing it at extreme - you have to step up to big 338's - 338RUM 338 Edge or plain 338 Lapua - using 300gr SMK's or 300Berger OTM
Yes you can kill a moose with lighter ammo, but you want it done in less then 20-30feet. To achieve that you need to get perfect shoot placement, lots of kinetic energy (from 180gr - 300gr bullets)
If you are shooting behind the shoulder and miscalculate or the wind is pushing it on the shoulder blade or bone - your lighter bullets will not broke the bone, and you will have a limping moose what will run for days.
That is the reason why you have to step up to 7rm, 300wm, or 338's using the heaviest round possible.
Don't be afraid about big rifle... they are not kickers unless you get them really light.
1. You will need to replace the butstock with limbsaver.
2. if you hunt alone for the moose and you want to see the shots through scope you have to install a very good muzzlebrake
3. your rifle will end up around 10-12lb
4. You will need a rangefinder and strong knowledge using a ballistic software passing 300yards.
5. Your scope need at the upper end 16-20x power to take shoots at 800 and beyound
6. you have to practice shooting of the backpack, bipod and shooting sticks. Sometimes the willow are so tall, your bipod will be useless and you have to improvise using tripod or a tree.
7. Make sure you are practice in this way, and stay away from bechrest shooting. (your rifle will react different and the group will open up a lot)
8. get a rangefinder what will range in show, rain, fog up to 1200-1500yards (you have to spend a lot of money on swarowsky or zeiss)
Leica will stop ranging at 600-800 yards on snow or rain day
9. you have to do a proper bedding and free floating the barrel to acheave the best group 1/2 MOA or 0.5MOA to be able to stretch it up to 800yard.
I hope the above will help you choose the right equipment.
Wow... I'm amazed 7 pages of replays and nobody got it right.
No offense please...
We just try to help a fellow members here...
1st. - Nobody asked how far away is expecting to shoot the moose
2nd - any caliber will do the job at shorter range (up to 2-300 yards)
As soon you push the distance - a lot of small caliber will NOT do the job done...
For moose /big game you need 1400flb energy and 1800fps or 1500fps speed to open reliable
Preferable 180gr minimum weight bullet SMK or Berger OTM
Using a ballistics software will give you the maximum distance what you can achieve this speeds.
Based on the energy and speed you can choose the RIGHT caliber to do the job done.
Any 7rm loaded with 180gr Berger OTM or 180gr SMK at 2900-3000 fps will get you at 800yards for a MOOSE
If you are planning to go further 800-1200yards - you will need to step up to 300WM, Or 300WSM or 300RUM using 240gr SMK
If you are really pushing it at extreme - you have to step up to big 338's - 338RUM 338 Edge or plain 338 Lapua - using 300gr SMK's or 300Berger OTM
Yes you can kill a moose with lighter ammo, but you want it done in less then 20-30feet. To achieve that you need to get perfect shoot placement, lots of kinetic energy (from 180gr - 300gr bullets)
If you are shooting behind the shoulder and miscalculate or the wind is pushing it on the shoulder blade or bone - your lighter bullets will not broke the bone, and you will have a limping moose what will run for days.
That is the reason why you have to step up to 7rm, 300wm, or 338's using the heaviest round possible.
Don't be afraid about big rifle... they are not kickers unless you get them really light.
1. You will need to replace the butstock with limbsaver.
2. if you hunt alone for the moose and you want to see the shots through scope you have to install a very good muzzlebrake
3. your rifle will end up around 10-12lb
4. You will need a rangefinder and strong knowledge using a ballistic software passing 300yards.
5. Your scope need at the upper end 16-20x power to take shoots at 800 and beyound
6. you have to practice shooting of the backpack, bipod and shooting sticks. Sometimes the willow are so tall, your bipod will be useless and you have to improvise using tripod or a tree.
7. Make sure you are practice in this way, and stay away from bechrest shooting. (your rifle will react different and the group will open up a lot)
8. get a rangefinder what will range in show, rain, fog up to 1200-1500yards (you have to spend a lot of money on swarowsky or zeiss)
Leica will stop ranging at 600-800 yards on snow or rain day
9. you have to do a proper bedding and free floating the barrel to acheave the best group 1/2 MOA or 0.5MOA to be able to stretch it up to 800yard.
I hope the above will help you choose the right equipment.
It's amazing that some people think they are undergunned because their rifle doesn't knock the moose off its feet. I personally have always found moose very easy to kill. I love all the bigger calibres and own/hunt with many of them but for fun, not because I think I need to. Some genuinely think you need a 300 mag or 338 mag for moose and that is pretty funny.
Wow... I'm amazed 7 pages of replays and nobody got it right.
No offense please...
We just try to help a fellow members here...
1st. - Nobody asked how far away is expecting to shoot the moose
2nd - any caliber will do the job at shorter range (up to 2-300 yards)
As soon you push the distance - a lot of small caliber will NOT do the job done...
For moose /big game you need 1400flb energy and 1800fps or 1500fps speed to open reliable
Preferable 180gr minimum weight bullet SMK or Berger OTM
Using a ballistics software will give you the maximum distance what you can achieve this speeds.
Based on the energy and speed you can choose the RIGHT caliber to do the job done.
Any 7rm loaded with 180gr Berger OTM or 180gr SMK at 2900-3000 fps will get you at 800yards for a MOOSE
If you are planning to go further 800-1200yards - you will need to step up to 300WM, Or 300WSM or 300RUM using 240gr SMK
If you are really pushing it at extreme - you have to step up to big 338's - 338RUM 338 Edge or plain 338 Lapua - using 300gr SMK's or 300Berger OTM
Yes you can kill a moose with lighter ammo, but you want it done in less then 20-30feet. To achieve that you need to get perfect shoot placement, lots of kinetic energy (from 180gr - 300gr bullets)
If you are shooting behind the shoulder and miscalculate or the wind is pushing it on the shoulder blade or bone - your lighter bullets will not broke the bone, and you will have a limping moose what will run for days.
That is the reason why you have to step up to 7rm, 300wm, or 338's using the heaviest round possible.
Don't be afraid about big rifle... they are not kickers unless you get them really light.
1. You will need to replace the butstock with limbsaver.
2. if you hunt alone for the moose and you want to see the shots through scope you have to install a very good muzzlebrake
3. your rifle will end up around 10-12lb
4. You will need a rangefinder and strong knowledge using a ballistic software passing 300yards.
5. Your scope need at the upper end 16-20x power to take shoots at 800 and beyound
6. you have to practice shooting of the backpack, bipod and shooting sticks. Sometimes the willow are so tall, your bipod will be useless and you have to improvise using tripod or a tree.
7. Make sure you are practice in this way, and stay away from bechrest shooting. (your rifle will react different and the group will open up a lot)
8. get a rangefinder what will range in show, rain, fog up to 1200-1500yards (you have to spend a lot of money on swarowsky or zeiss)
Leica will stop ranging at 600-800 yards on snow or rain day
9. you have to do a proper bedding and free floating the barrel to acheave the best group 1/2 MOA or 0.5MOA to be able to stretch it up to 800yard.
I hope the above will help you choose the right equipment.
Excellent discussion here but ask yourself how many moose were harvested in the 20th century with 308, 303, 3030, 3006, 270 before we all decided that a 338 lapua mag was needed to shoot from mountain ridge to mountain ridge.
My question for you is exactly how many moose have you shot, or let's make that how many animals all together have you shot, to make you such an expert that you have the balls to come on this thread after 6+ pages of good advice from guys who have literally taken 100s of head of game and proclaim yourself the only one who has "GOT IT RIGHT". A little arrogant considering the company and expertise of some of the posters here. Given your post count of 5 and feedback of 2 maybe you should be reading and learning, instead of proclaiming yourself the resident expert. I have likely shot more game in one 4 week period in RSA than you have in your lifetime, you might want to think about that.................
Have you ever taken an animal beyond 500 or 600 mtrs, I doubt it, you recommend match bullets for hunting, what if the shot is at 50 mtrs..........who tracks the wounded moose shot with a match bullet.
Given your writing and punctuation I would guess that your first language is not English, correct? French I suspect, or more precisely Quebecois.................You sir, are offensive to those of us who have actually been there and done that, which are many on this forum, and I might suggest you change your arrogant tack if you ever wish to become a credible member.




























