I had the good fortune of taking my first coyote a few weeks ago. The rifle I used was a Remington 783 (1:9.25 twist, 22" barrel). I was using factory 100 grain Winchester ammo as I primarily hunt deer with the rifle and get excellent groups with that bullet weight. Despite doing my part and putting one into the coyote's boiler room at just under 90 yards, the coyote still managed to roll around in the grass for much longer than I thought was possible based off my shot placement. Closer inspection showed the bullet went straight through without expanding.
I'm sure for many of you that would be common sense but I'm still relatively new to hunting and wasn't expecting that. Although coyotes are pests and causing havoc on the farmers property that I'm hunting on, I do my best to make sure anything I shoot dies as quickly as possible. I now have plenty of Lapua brass and both Varget and H4350 powder for reloading something more ethical. The Hornady V-max has great reviews and I'm leaning towards it in 87 grain pills but see it and other manufacturers offer varmint bullets in 75, 65 and 58 grains. I know no two rifles are the same, but I'm hoping someone here has a similar rifle twist and length that could point me in the right direction for bullet weight or other bullets besides the V-max.
Rodder
I'm sure for many of you that would be common sense but I'm still relatively new to hunting and wasn't expecting that. Although coyotes are pests and causing havoc on the farmers property that I'm hunting on, I do my best to make sure anything I shoot dies as quickly as possible. I now have plenty of Lapua brass and both Varget and H4350 powder for reloading something more ethical. The Hornady V-max has great reviews and I'm leaning towards it in 87 grain pills but see it and other manufacturers offer varmint bullets in 75, 65 and 58 grains. I know no two rifles are the same, but I'm hoping someone here has a similar rifle twist and length that could point me in the right direction for bullet weight or other bullets besides the V-max.
Rodder


















































