We often have threads about "What cartridge should I get?"
usually they ask "what caliber", of course , but that is a different subject.
Here is the truth, may as well sticky this.
Usually , we are talking about modern bottle neck cartridges in a modern bolt action rifle, and mostly for non dangerous game (so grizzlies excluded) so I will limit my comments to these.
All of them, from 7-08 to 338 Winchester Magnum work. They will all kill a moose, our biggest animal other than bison.
The key to it all is shot placement. Put the first bullet in the right place, and all you have to do is start skinning.
The second key is somewhat more complicated, and that is bullet construction for the cartridge, and how it relates to shot placement.
if in doubt, wait for a broadside shot and put a bullet behind the shoulder. Virtually every cartridge shooting virtually every bullet can kill with this shot.
if you want to use a smaller cartridge for bigger game, using a premium bullet increases your advantage.
If you want to take any shot possible, a premium bullet aids you.
We can talk endlessly about how a 30-06 is better than a .270 or a 7WSM is better than a 30-06 etc, but the truth is, a good bullet in the right place= meat.
Most game is taken within 300 yards, and at that range a .300 Magnum and a 7-08 don't make a big difference in bullet drop or killing power.
Know your rifle, shoot it alot. Use good bullets and/or pass up questionable shots.
But killing animals is not that hard, if you put the bullet in the right place. It's more up to you than the cartridge. So don't fret abotu .308 vs 30-06 vs .270 vs 3oo Mag vs 338...
usually they ask "what caliber", of course , but that is a different subject.
Here is the truth, may as well sticky this.
Usually , we are talking about modern bottle neck cartridges in a modern bolt action rifle, and mostly for non dangerous game (so grizzlies excluded) so I will limit my comments to these.
All of them, from 7-08 to 338 Winchester Magnum work. They will all kill a moose, our biggest animal other than bison.
The key to it all is shot placement. Put the first bullet in the right place, and all you have to do is start skinning.
The second key is somewhat more complicated, and that is bullet construction for the cartridge, and how it relates to shot placement.
if in doubt, wait for a broadside shot and put a bullet behind the shoulder. Virtually every cartridge shooting virtually every bullet can kill with this shot.
if you want to use a smaller cartridge for bigger game, using a premium bullet increases your advantage.
If you want to take any shot possible, a premium bullet aids you.
We can talk endlessly about how a 30-06 is better than a .270 or a 7WSM is better than a 30-06 etc, but the truth is, a good bullet in the right place= meat.
Most game is taken within 300 yards, and at that range a .300 Magnum and a 7-08 don't make a big difference in bullet drop or killing power.
Know your rifle, shoot it alot. Use good bullets and/or pass up questionable shots.
But killing animals is not that hard, if you put the bullet in the right place. It's more up to you than the cartridge. So don't fret abotu .308 vs 30-06 vs .270 vs 3oo Mag vs 338...
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