Most folks have never witnessed the devastation a 30 cal, 200-220 grain bullet will do when shot from a 30-06 Springfield chambered rifle.
Slow, heavy for caliber, bullets kill very quickly when they're placed well.
Back in the day, hunters understood the value of a heavy bullet when it came to breaking and penetrating big, heavy bones, or just knocking them down.
Folks shooting Black Powder rifles don't need to be convinced, and neither do folks shooting large bore rifles.
Most folks today are velocity fanatics, and especially with monolithic bullets, it also works well.
My stash of 220 grain round nose, .308 diameter is just about depleted. I doubt I will look for or need more.
The thing is, if you have these bullets, don't be shy about using them, they may be old school tech, but they still work very well.
In good strong, rifles, there is no reason they can't be loaded to 60,000 psi and increase velocities by appx 100 fps from a 24 in bbl.
I have a 98 Mauser, with a 24 inch bbl, sighted in for 220 Hornady RN bullets. It shoots them at 2670 fps, with a load you'll likely never find in any load manuals, and its recoil is definitely noticeable, but you just can't ignore the results on a big game animal out to 300yds.
Like the OP, I sight it in 3 inches high at 100 yds, and it's pretty much zeroed at 200 yds, and about 9 inches low at 300yds.
Slow, heavy for caliber, bullets kill very quickly when they're placed well.
Back in the day, hunters understood the value of a heavy bullet when it came to breaking and penetrating big, heavy bones, or just knocking them down.
Folks shooting Black Powder rifles don't need to be convinced, and neither do folks shooting large bore rifles.
Most folks today are velocity fanatics, and especially with monolithic bullets, it also works well.
My stash of 220 grain round nose, .308 diameter is just about depleted. I doubt I will look for or need more.
The thing is, if you have these bullets, don't be shy about using them, they may be old school tech, but they still work very well.
In good strong, rifles, there is no reason they can't be loaded to 60,000 psi and increase velocities by appx 100 fps from a 24 in bbl.
I have a 98 Mauser, with a 24 inch bbl, sighted in for 220 Hornady RN bullets. It shoots them at 2670 fps, with a load you'll likely never find in any load manuals, and its recoil is definitely noticeable, but you just can't ignore the results on a big game animal out to 300yds.
Like the OP, I sight it in 3 inches high at 100 yds, and it's pretty much zeroed at 200 yds, and about 9 inches low at 300yds.


















































