- Location
- Somewhere on the Hudson Bay Coast
I don't agree with any of these suggestions as being fur friendly. An expanding bullet, impacting at full .223 velocity, regardless if designed for varmints or game will exit and leave a large exit wound on fox sized animals; the white fox (smaller than their colored counterparts) I shot with a 50 gr TNT looked like someone had thrown a baseball through it, harsh wouldn't begin to describe it. Match bullets provide a high degree of accuracy, but their terminal performance tends to be inconsistent, where one might expand explosively, the next might pencil through, although I've had some success with 52 gr Sierras MKs. The answer IMHO is a FMJ bullet, which has several draw backs, first is they tend not to be quick killers, secondly, they don't usually match the accuracy of either a game or varmint bullet, and thirdly, if they are only marginally stable, and tumble on impact, they'll make as big a mess as an expanding bullet. The one I'd choose is the Lapua .224/55 gr FMJ, product code S538, which has a good reputation for accuracy in the .223, and I'd load it with a full charge of 4895 which has proven an excellent powder in both the .222 magnum and the .223. If I was wolf hunting, I'd load 45 gr TSXs.




















































