ideal elk round

Except that it isn't and there is a reason it will never replace it.

Anyway, the ideal elk round is the flattest shooting, heaviest bullet, in a rifle that is reasonable for you to carry, and still shoot "accurately".

For some that is a .270, and others its a .378 Weatherby. For me, I think the 338-06, 35 Whelen, .338 Win Mag, and 358 Norma are all in that range for me if I was to have a dedicated Elk rifle.

Otherwise I would choose anything in the 260/6.5 range and up and go hunting. Put it through the front half and eat some steak.

Not trying to be a smart ass but in all seriousness can you elaborate on the .280/7mm thing?
 
No way dude! I practice that shot every night, immediately following my threesome with the Kardashians....

The thought of you and two cardassians is revolting. :D

ds9-205-cardassians-00188-300x225.png


For elk, I'll use my 308.
 
This thread is showing a variety of choices, pretty well all of which will make decent Elk rifles if the respective range of the chambering is respected and the bullet placed in the correct spot.
I have shot 35 Elk, and have taken them with everything from the 264 Win Mag up. a couple with the 7x57, 1 with the 7mm Rem Mag, 4 with the 7mm STW, 5 or 6 with the 30-06, the rest have fallen to one of the big 30's [mostly the 308 Norma Mag]
One thread common to all my elk...they were shot with Partitions.
The longest one went without piling up was 80 yards, several died right there at the shot.
I agree that Elk are harder to put down than are Moose.
I suspect that the 338 would make a very fine Elk rifle, but have never used anything with that big a hole in the barrrel to shoot one myself.
Whatever one chooses, learn to shoot it well, use a good bullet, and place it properly. Those steaks sure are delicious!! Eagleye.
 
Rem338win is nearer to my thoughts. I'm a .35 guy -- 35 Whelen in a 700, and if the geography is suitable I like to bring along the BLR in 358 Win.
 
f:P:
I have shot Elk, from ranges of 20 yards out to 800 yards, never had to track them more then 150 yards, Ive used archey equipment, and rifles, ive use from a 257 roberts up and as an all round elk gun, one that never stays home is my 300rum, then my next choice is 300saum then my 300wby, if i,m going on horse back and need a saddle gun , i use my 336 Blr, take yer time pick and place yer shot, they are an animal that has a great will to live, that makes them tuff to kill, but also know yer rifle and be comfortable wth it, know it so well so that you know when you raise it up to shoot, weather it be at a 50 yrd standing broad side shot in the open, or 500 yard running shot in the bush, when you squeeze yer shot off, you know exactly where that bullet is going, there is a saying i read some where, beware the old man wth a rusty old gun , he probably knows how to use it, just practice to be that od man wth the rusty old gun, then no worries you,ll get yer elk every year

f:P: I think some posters honestly think they are impressing someone with drivel like this.
If they actually knew what sort of impression they were making, they might refrain.
I can recognize a horse turd on the road when I see one. LOL,
Eagleye.
 
Not trying to be a smart ass but in all seriousness can you elaborate on the .280/7mm thing?

Sure, the 280AI doesn't have the powder capacity that the 7mm Remington Magnum, and never will. All things being equal, the 7mm RM will always be faster when the bullet, powder, pressure and barrel length are equal. Cartridge shape etc, has little to no affect on anything in the relm of physics, it is capacity to bore size, and the .280AI crowd (most not all) seems to believe that their pet superceeds all the applicable and reasonable laws of physics.
3150 for a 140gr bullet in a 24" is the reasonable max for a 280AI. The same bullet at the same pressure will go 3250 out of a 7mm Rem Mag in the same barrel. It is that simple.
And yes, a 280AI makes it to factory 7mm Rem Mag velocities, but at higher pressures than the factory ammo. Not everyone likes to ride the redline.

And as that goes, both are very applicable to Elk. :)
 
And as that goes, both are very applicable to Elk. :)


That was all I was getting at. Sorry if saying "it performs LIKE the 7mm RM" gave you a wedgy or something. I have both calibers... which would be how I could see them perform very similar. Maybe you've only read about the .280AI, or tried one made by Nosler? I don't know.

Seeing how after being shot, an animal doesn't raise its head to congratulate you on how fast your bullet was going, I don't really care about the speed either.

Instead of a chrono, I shoot ballistic jelly blocks and I pay attention to bullet drop from 100, 200, 300, and I'll bet you have no idea how close a .280AI is to a 7mm in that department.
 
That was all I was getting at. Sorry if saying "it performs LIKE the 7mm RM" gave you a wedgy or something. I have both calibers... which would be how I could see them perform very similar. Maybe you've only read about the .280AI, or tried one made by Nosler? I don't know.

Seeing how after being shot, an animal doesn't raise its head to congratulate you on how fast your bullet was going, I don't really care about the speed either.

Instead of a chrono, I shoot ballistic jelly blocks and I pay attention to bullet drop from 100, 200, 300, and I'll bet you have no idea how close a .280AI is to a 7mm in that department.

I have owned both, and found that neither had anything on the .270 Winchester, either on paper or in the field, so stuck with that and a .284 Winchester, a ballistic twin. In fact I find that the .270 through 300mag crowd is rather yawn worthy in ther ability to consistently create the same reaction on game within the 400yd mark. They all move a few yards and die, which is the "congratulations" I am looking for. :rolleyes:
As for your lack of chronograph and need to pay for ballistic gelatin, good for you. There are holes in that statement not worth pursuing.
My experience with all said cartridges happens to come from the well over 100 game animals I have personally shot or witnessed shot, and that happens to be all the evidence I need. Are you happy now that your statement has been overly generalized?
 
Pretty hard to beat a .300WM for a large game rifle...I would have no problem shooting a large elk with a .308, but distance becomes a factor, and mags give you a little more of it...

If you are a handloader and want something a little different, I would look at .300 WBY or 7mm WBY...

300 Win Mag, works, lots of rifle options, factory ammo relatively cheap. 180gr remington plain core lokt 7 elk, 8shots ranges 35yds out to 400yds.
 
Sure, the 280AI doesn't have the powder capacity that the 7mm Remington Magnum, and never will. All things being equal, the 7mm RM will always be faster when the bullet, powder, pressure and barrel length are equal. Cartridge shape etc, has little to no affect on anything in the relm of physics, it is capacity to bore size, and the .280AI crowd (most not all) seems to believe that their pet superceeds all the applicable and reasonable laws of physics.
3150 for a 140gr bullet in a 24" is the reasonable max for a 280AI. The same bullet at the same pressure will go 3250 out of a 7mm Rem Mag in the same barrel. It is that simple.
And yes, a 280AI makes it to factory 7mm Rem Mag velocities, but at higher pressures than the factory ammo. Not everyone likes to ride the redline.

And as that goes, both are very applicable to Elk. :)
Thanks
 
never shot an elk, but id have no dramas using a 35whelen with 225gr handloads... out to 250 even a tad further with practise n proper sight in
 
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