| | #41 | ||
| Senior Member Join Date: Jan 2008 Location: Austin,Texas
Posts: 103
| Quote:
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To go big Bear hunting in Alaska without at least a .44mag as a back-up would be suicide. The 338 and .44mag is my choice. Last edited by Rattle'em up; 05-03-2008 at 08:39 PM. Reason: Automerged Doublepost | ||
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| | #43 |
| Banned Join Date: Nov 2007 Location: Tn
Posts: 623
| I like your choice...BUT, just for the record, there's no place for the 55Gr loading for big game, and.... it's not difficult to find some 200 and 220gr loadings for the B I G stuff! |
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| | #44 |
| Senior Member Join Date: Oct 2007 Location: Forsyth county of north carolina
Posts: 226
| Woah, I didnt know that they had 220 grain 30-06 bullets. That must be some pretty strong stuff.
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| | #45 |
| Senior Member Join Date: Sep 2006
Posts: 144
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.308 or .30-06, so many options, and so very proven.
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| | #46 |
| Senior Member Join Date: Sep 2005 Location: Maine, USA
Posts: 1,903
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I've said it before, and I'll say it again: 30-06 Springfield You get get bullet weights as light as 95gr (accelerator sabot rounds), to as heavy as 220gr. It will take everything in North America, and there is literally a load designed for everything from 30 lb animals to 1000+ lb animals. |
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| | #47 | |
| Banned Join Date: Nov 2007 Location: Tn
Posts: 623
| Quote:
66201 - .30-06 Springfield Express Centerfire Rifle Cartridge, 220-Grain Soft Point Core-Lokt Bullet, 2410 fps, 20 Rounds Per Box - Manufactured by: Remington | |
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| | #48 | |
| Banned Join Date: Dec 2006
Posts: 125
| Quote:
i agree no doubts | |
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| | #49 |
| Senior Member Join Date: Nov 2007 Location: sawyer, ok
Posts: 540
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All the calibers mentioned are good and all have their following for various reasons be them actual or personal, I like the 7x57 mauser because it is a proven round and I like the .284 dia. projectile lots of different loads and bullets to chose from. Just my opinion. steve
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| | #50 |
| Member Join Date: Nov 2005
Posts: 21
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My 30-06... Because it has already killed everything from wood chucks to moose.
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| | #51 |
| Senior Member Join Date: Nov 2007 Location: Little town in ARKANSAW!
Posts: 2,183
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I'm gonna be one of em that says .30/06. But maybe 7.62x54r would be better LOL.
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| | #52 | |
| The Mayor ![]() | Quote:
__________________ The Most Expensive Commodity In This Country Is Ignorance! | |
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| | #53 | ||
| Senior Member Join Date: Dec 2003 Location: June-Dec. Arusha, TZ~Dec.-June PSL, FL.
Posts: 188
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Not picking on you guys, these responses just happen to be the ones I will reply to. Quote:
Personally, for all North American game, I feel the 06' is a bit lacking in power. See below: Quote:
I have seen many, many 06''s shot at game animals (I even own 2 - 06's) and will say . . . . . . . . . . . . . . they will kill animals. Loaded with anything more than a 200 grain bullet, the "magic" starts to fade off the 30 06' rapidly. As I said, it will kill game, but it is just adequate (see definition below) for all N.A. game. And I mean adequate as in waiting for the perfect broadside shot. If you consider bad angle shots, it is not adequate for all N.A. game animals, IMO. True, you can kill them with a 06', with bad angle shots, but there is a good chance you will track them further that you would had you used a larger diameter bullet, with more power. OK, hold your horses now, and hear me out . . . . . see if this makes any sense . . . . . . . . . . . . I do quite a bit of shooting in my job and have a pretty fair amount of experience in shooting and observations of animals being shot. You cannot always get the perfect broadside shot. So, you plan for the worst and hope for the best when hunting. If you cannot always get a broadside shot, you should know how to place bad angle shots. I find the quartering away shot a very good shot at putting the animal on the ground in short order ! Not the easiest shot, but a great shot on game and I would encourage everyone to study it and use it. Why ? You get both lungs and 1 shoulder. Very tough on a critter to run very far on 3 legs, and no lungs. And if the animal is not down right there, it will at least stumble, allowing you time to get in another shot (generally). Now the quartering away shot is a bad angle shot. If the cartridge I am using will not go through to the "off side" shoulder, I need a more powerful cartridge, end of discussion. I must break the off side shoulder after penetrating the rear to middle section of the "on side" lung, pass through the chest cavity, through the off side lung and into the off side shoulder. It is very effective at closing the story and putting the animal on the ground. I assume everyone here can shoot 175 yards or so. With that being the hypothetical distance, do you think an 06' will penetrate on a bad angle shot cross wise/ways and into the off shoulder of an Elk ? A Moose ? A Bear ? I used to guide for Elk in Colorado (before Tanzania) and we killed a ton of Elk. Of the ones we did not recover, many were bad angle shots (some were just plain bad shots as well) with some of the "adequate" cartridges mentioned in this thread. Much of the reason I advocate the use of larger diameter cartridges is, every hunt has a finite amount of time ! Are you willing to pass up the 6x6 Elk or a huge Brownie on the last of the hunt because he is quartering away ? As I have said here before, because you have 4 or 5 rifles, that does not mean they are adequate for every task at hand or hunt. Hell ! I have 10+ rifles and there is only one of them I would take if going after Brown Bear ! A 458 Lott and it is not the best choice for Brown Bear ! Powerful enough, yes. Versatile enough (distance wise) ? Maybe. But I don't want to hunt with a "maybe". I want something well suited for the animal I am hunting. A 270 will kill a Brown Bear, but would I choose to take a 270 on a $18k Brownie hunt ? I don't think so. I would choose something else. Something a bit more suitable to the game hunted I think. Something that will anchor the animal on a bad angle shot. As I relayed, I love my 7mm Mag. and have shot some animals that were way "out of it's class" power wise with it. Does not mean it is an adequate cartridge for that animal. Because I shot a Buffalo behind the ear and killed it, does not make it a Buffalo cartridge/gun. The main factor in that was, I did not have to shoot that day. I waited until everything was right. Two days before, things were NOT right and I didn't shoot. A client I had in Tanzania said something to me that I never forgot (he was on his 21st. safari, so had a fair bit of knowledge about hunting. . . . . and brought a 338 Win. Mag.) ~ When we spoke of cartridges he said " I want to spend my time hunting . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . not tracking wounded animals. If you think I did not hit the animal well, you shoot him also". As it turned out, I did not have to put another shot into any of his animals, which was a good thing for me. The 25 06', 270, 7x57, 284, 7mm, 30 06', 300 Mag's are all good cartridges ! However, they are good for specific things and IMO, not all things. ----- ----- ----- ----- ----- Dictionary.com Unabridged (v 1.1) - Cite This Source - Share This ad·e·quate Audio Help /ˈædɪkwɪt/ Pronunciation Key - Show Spelled Pronunciation[ad-i-kwit] Pronunciation Key - Show IPA Pronunciation –adjective 1. as much or as good as necessary for some requirement or purpose; fully sufficient, suitable, or fit (often fol. by to or for): This car is adequate to our needs. adequate food for fifty people. 2. barely sufficient or suitable: Being adequate is not good enough. 3. Law. reasonably sufficient for starting legal action: adequate grounds. Best,
__________________ Phil Lozano Phil Lozano Tanzania Trophy Expeditions | ||
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| | #54 |
| Senior Member |
Well i came to this thread late, but i would choose a 300 or 338 win mag. Obvious reasons would be power and good trajectory. Also the relative availability of bullets, ammo, and rifles. personally i could care less about a 30-06, but thats just me. And an excellent reply from Phil as always lol.
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| | #55 |
| Senior Member Join Date: Mar 2008
Posts: 105
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30/06 if i had to choose. prefer the .308
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| | #56 |
| Senior Member ![]() |
I would still choose the .30-06 for the sole purpose of availability of ammo and on a side bar it's the chambered round for my Garand but anyway lol
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| | #57 |
| Senior Member Join Date: Dec 2003 Location: June-Dec. Arusha, TZ~Dec.-June PSL, FL.
Posts: 188
| Wadda ya mean . . . . . lol ? I wasn't trying to be funny . . . . . . . lol ! (now I am !) Best,
__________________ Phil Lozano Phil Lozano Tanzania Trophy Expeditions |
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| | #58 | |
| The Mayor ![]() | Quote:
...........Phil, as far as the .30-06 goes, I agree with you. Once you go above 180 grains, you probably need to move up a caliber. I picked the .338 Winmag, but for polar bear and brown bear, I'd feel better with my .375 H&H.
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| | #59 | |||
| Banned Join Date: Nov 2007 Location: Tn
Posts: 623
| Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
Last edited by turner; 05-06-2008 at 09:06 PM. Reason: Automerged Doublepost | |||
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| | #60 | ||
| Senior Member Join Date: Dec 2003 Location: June-Dec. Arusha, TZ~Dec.-June PSL, FL.
Posts: 188
| Quote:
A Square - 30 06' with a 180 grain bullet (they don't list anything larger) is 2841 fps. and a Max. load (24" barrel). Sierra - Of 14 powders listed, 2 will do 2800 fps and both are Max. loads Of the 14 powders 2 will do 2700 fps, with 7 other powders listed as Max. loads, The one load for a 30 06' in the Sierra manual with a 220 grain bullet, 3 powders will do 2500 fps with Max. loads. 7 loads will do 2400 fps with 4 loads listed as Max. loads. I doubt every rifle will shoot 220 grain bullets from a 30 06' at the 2500 fps you mention as these loads were shot with a 26" barrel. And most all 06's will have a 24" or shorter barrel. On to the 338's - A Square Manual and 338/A2 (24" barrel) Max. load = 2524 fps with a 250 grain bullet And another powder listed at 2527 fps.(assume it's Max.) 3 other powders list 2200 to 2400 fps A Square - 338 Winnie 24" barrel - 250 grain bullet @ 2807 Max. load - 1 other powder at 2803 fps (does not say it's a Max. load, but I would think it is). 3 other powders listed at 2500 - 2700 fps. Sierra manual (24" barrel) - 9 powders listed from 2500 - 2700 fps. No listing for the A2. Based on what I have just read, I would say the difference in the 338's would be quite noticeable. The Winnie would shoot much flatter for sure. As far as the 30 06' vs the 338 Win Mag., there is no reason to debate which is more effective at 200 yards and beyond. Do the math below and then tell me which cartridge is the most appropriate to anchor large game on the spot. Or use the formula that you judge other cartridges by and let me know. Thanks. ----- ----- ------ Originally Posted by Phil Lozano View Post Something to consider (when talking about bullet ballistics/performance) is Penetration Index (P.I.). The easy way to calculate P.I.; Example for a 416 ~ PI = 124.2 * (vel/2400)^2 * (wt./400)^2 / (dia./.416)^4 -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- For the 450 N.E. and the 470 N.E. below. For the 480 gr. bullet at 2150 fps, PI = 105.5 For the 470 NE, 2150 fps, 500 gr., PI= 92.2 Like most formulas, it likes velocity. -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- Forgot to include comment for "Shock Power Index" (SPI). Which is calculating the kinetic energy, by the cross sectional area of the bullet. X SA =pie x R2 Basically, this is how hard of a blow the bullet gives when striking the animal. Penetration of some large bores (over 50 cal.) seem to lack penetration, and at the same time have a large SPI. Examples I have seen ~ If a brain shot is missed on an Elephant with a 375 H&H, the Ele will run off without much visual effect of the bullet strike. However, the same shot with say a 600 N.E. (not nearly the highest on the penetration Index), you can visually see the effect of the bullet impact as it stuns and disorients the Elephant. You may or may not be able to relate to this example, but think about it a bit. I think most would agree, there is a noticeable difference when shooting an Elk at 200 yards with a 338 Win. Mag than when using a 7mm Mag.. Granted, this formula, as with the kinetic energy formula being stacked in favor of velocity, is stacked in favor of bullet diameter (but velocity does play a very important role here as well, as it uses kinetic energy in part of the formula. Personally, I think this is quite an important equation when choosing a cartridge/caliber for a specific animal. JMO Best, Phil ____________________________ Professional Hunter ~ Tanzania Stay out of sight and down wind Quote:
I really am a quite funny guy. However, I do take hunting quite seriously. Doing so has kept me from leaving any of my own blood in Africa for 20+ years Your cartridge choices are darn good ones. For the Big Bears, a 375 (or a 416) is not out of line. Best, Phil
__________________ Phil Lozano Phil Lozano Tanzania Trophy Expeditions Last edited by Phil Lozano; 05-07-2008 at 07:14 AM. Reason: Automerged Doublepost | ||
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