Read that again. And one more time, just for luck.
Very few people out of the myriad of folks who buy a 300 RUM will ever learn to shoot it to its true potential. There are always a few of them on the EE for sale with less than 60 rounds through them, and for good reason. To a novice they look like a great idea, right up until they shoot them......
A) Bullets, not headstamps...
B) Energy rarely kills animals...Holes in important parts kills them fairly reliably though.
C) It doesn't take a 300 RUM to poke an appropriate bullet in an elks lungs at any range you'll be able to hit him...
D) You need to learn how to dial a turret. "Flat shooting" means less than nothing when it comes to reliably hitting targets at extended ranges.
Gunning RUM ammo at $100 per 20 rounds gets old fast... And finding a reliable lot of factory rounds that will do what you want will get pricey up front fast.... And by that, I mean finding a factory round with acceptable accuracy, and then buying every single box of it that you can get your hands on in the same manufacturing lot. Don't expect that just because you find a box it likes, that the next 20 round box of the same stuff 6 months down the road will shoot the same, or at least acceptably well enough so that you could reasonably expect to hit a thousand yard steel plate.......
Pretty much dead on. I would add that unless you are willing to put the bucks into tons of practice, your 300 RUM won't do anything your 308, 7-08 or similar gun won't do. Without an awful lot of practice, IMHO, it's unethical to try a shot at anything over 300 yards unless you know your gun inside and out. Just for kicks, if you haven't already done so, measure out 300 yards. It's a looong way. Out to 300, a 308, 6.5, 7-08 or such will do the trick just fine on just about any critter. If you do have the equipment and skills to shoot out out to 700-800, you also have to keep travel time to the target in mind. If the critter takes one step or 2 in the time between pulling the trigger and the bullet getting there, you're talking a gut-shot or seriously wounded critter that will die a slow, lingering death. Snipers don't have to worry about that, because a wounded enemy is pretty much as good as a dead one. Just food for thought.
Many moons ago, a friend of mine bought a BAR in 7mm Mag. He went on and on about how good it would be out to 1000 yards. SO I challenged him. I had an HK G3 that I knew inside and out. We went to a range and I took a piece of 4 X 4 Aspenite, and drew a 6" circle on it. He fired 5 shots out of his 4-12X scope. On the second piece, I had painted about a 12" circle, so I could see it, because my rifle had open sights. IIRC, my peep sights had a 100 and a 365 yd. aperture. Anyhow, he had about an 18" group, I had a 6" group. Guess whose critter would have been dead faster? I'm not a crackshot, but I practiced a lot back then.
You're a lot better off with a good, moderate caliber gun you can afford to shoot and that won't make you flinch than a 490 WhizBang that costs 20 bucks a round and will knock your fillings out. But, it's a free country, and do what you feel is best, I would just suggest you do it after weighing all the pro's and con's.




















































