Author Topic: Bullet choice ruled our hunt  (Read 4122 times)

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Offline Mac11700

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Re: Bullet choice ruled our hunt
« Reply #30 on: November 28, 2007, 06:27:15 PM »


1 bullet to do all...for every body in every hunting situation..out of different guns...Nope...that ain't going to happen as long as people can't get it thru their heads they have to use the right bullet for the right job...and that they have to be able to shoot accurately...Until that happens...people will continue blaming the bullet...You don't honestly think they would take the blame for their own mistakes do you... ::)

Mac
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Online Graybeard

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Re: Bullet choice ruled our hunt
« Reply #31 on: November 28, 2007, 06:35:20 PM »
Technically speaking ugulates don't have shoulders at least not in the same sense as humans do. They do not have any bone to bone connection at the end of that front leg like we do with our shoulder sockets. It is just held in place by muscle and tendons.

If any of you shoulder shooting experts had ever actually disected a dead critter you'd likely know that. Clearly some here don't.

The heart is far far lower in the chest than where that scapula is so the comment above about
Quote
"How are you going to put the bullet through the heart if you are scared to shoot through the shoulder??"
shows a clear failure to understand deer anatomy 101.

Now I guess it kinda sorta depends on just what one calls a "shoulder" which as I've stated is something that technically a deer doesn't even have. I'm assuming (always a dangerous thing especially when the thing being discussed doesn't exactly even exist) that one is talking about that flat bone at the top to which the rest of the leg structure is attached. That's what "most" folks refer to as the "shoulder of a deer". At least that's where most folks point when indicating a shoulder shot.

IF you shoot there the one thing you will never hit is the heart. I truly wonder just how many have even an inkling just where the heart really sits in the chest of ugulates. Many of the tales I've read of bullets going thru this and that and hitting the heart tell me that particular person sure doesn't. I generally try to refrain from calling attention to such gross errors of anatomy. Unless bullets take 90 degree turns they don't hit that high and hit the heart both.

If one refers to the large upper bone of the leg as shoulder then there is a wee tad bit more credence but not a lot really. Look some time at a skeletal diagram of a deer or elk or whatever and you'll see what I mean. It really ain't exactly in line with where they heart really is located. I really love it when folks "center punch the lungs and heart. Yeah right.

I've said all this to say that it is clear most folks who bitch and moan about the piss poor bullets have no clue about deer anatomy 101 or where the heart, lungs, liver, "shoulder" or the leg bones of deer really lie in the body and in relationship to each other. It's also obvious that folks wish to blame all their errors and those of their hunting companions on the bullet used rather than the piss poor shooting that was done.

If you do not recover the deer you have absolutely no clue where the bullet hit and to say otherwise for the most part shows your lack of real world experience. Sure we all "think we know" where our bullets went but most times when the game is not recover that ain't where it went. Just as with my one deer shot with the .243 Winchester. I know where I think the bullet went, where it should have gone but the deer was not recovered so I fully admit I have no clue what really happened. Most likely not what I think did or should have cuz if it did that deer should have been recovered. Since it wasn't I'll always wonder was it me, the bullet or something else altogether. Was probably just a piss poor shot that looked good to me.

So all you arm chair internet know it all experts just keep on blaming the bullet for your failures. We'll keep chuckling away and knowing better. Just cuz a bullet did NOT do what you expected it would or hoped it would or thought it would does not constitute a bullet failure. Most always they do exactly what they are designed to do. If you use the wrong bullet the fault is yours NOT the bullet's. But go ahead and cry and moan it runs up the post count at least.


Bill aka the Graybeard
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I am not a lawyer and do not give legal advice.

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Offline NONYA

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Re: Bullet choice ruled our hunt
« Reply #32 on: November 28, 2007, 07:17:25 PM »
Yep they are perfect,its all us hunters that are making mistakes,we have to thread them through the deer without striking anything solid,such as a shoulder blade in order to make them perform as advertised,we are all incompetent shooters.
If it aint fair chase its FOUL,and illegal in my state!
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Offline Doesniper

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Re: Bullet choice ruled our hunt
« Reply #33 on: November 28, 2007, 08:01:17 PM »
Use Barnes and don't worry about bones or bullet failure. Just have your knife ready.

Offline NONYA

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Re: Bullet choice ruled our hunt
« Reply #34 on: November 28, 2007, 08:30:22 PM »
Yep
If it aint fair chase its FOUL,and illegal in my state!
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Offline 264 WIN MAG

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Re: Bullet choice ruled our hunt
« Reply #35 on: November 29, 2007, 02:28:40 AM »
Yep, BT's are perfect...even though there are hundreds and maybe even thousands of people out there complaining and crying right now wondering why their deer ran off and they couldn't find it....they are perfect...

Try to convince my buddy they are perfect right about now and he'll laugh at you...think he's still a little upset at the poor performance they gave him.

Offline Coyote Hunter

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Re: Bullet choice ruled our hunt
« Reply #36 on: November 29, 2007, 02:57:46 AM »


1 bullet to do all...for every body in every hunting situation..out of different guns...Nope...that ain't going to happen as long as people can't get it thru their heads they have to use the right bullet for the right job...and that they have to be able to shoot accurately...Until that happens...people will continue blaming the bullet...You don't honestly think they would take the blame for their own mistakes do you... ::)

Mac

Well, it certainly isn't going to happen with me using a BT, but there are a number of bullets that would fill the role of "1 bullet to do all" if we're talking big game hunting.  Although not my first choice, I would happily use a Partition in various cartridges for such a role.  Grand Slams served exactly that role for 2 decades without a problem.  These days North Fork's new sleeker bullets would be my first choice for reliable operation from the muzzle to way out there, but a Tipped TSX, Trophy Bonded and A-Frame would get my vote as well.
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Offline beemanbeme

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Re: Bullet choice ruled our hunt
« Reply #37 on: November 29, 2007, 02:59:39 AM »
CH & Nonya, When I say "not 1 in 500" and you guys say what hot rocks you are at 500 etc.  You don't think the guys that hang out in here are really representative of the run of the mill guys that take to the woods deer hunting do you?  Also, FWIW, as I'm sure you know, when you start talking about 500 yard shots (which I've never made on large game) you're talking about special set-ups or bullet drops in the neighborhood of 3 or 4 feet. If a guy has his rifle set up for it, or has done a lot of practice, he can pull it off if things are right but it certainly not a shot for the average joe.  

Offline Coyote Hunter

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Re: Bullet choice ruled our hunt
« Reply #38 on: November 29, 2007, 03:19:42 AM »
CH & Nonya, When I say "not 1 in 500" and you guys say what hot rocks you are at 500 etc.  You don't think the guys that hang out in here are really representative of the run of the mill guys that take to the woods deer hunting do you?  Also, FWIW, as I'm sure you know, when you start talking about 500 yard shots (which I've never made on large game) you're talking about special set-ups or bullet drops in the neighborhood of 3 or 4 feet. If a guy has his rifle set up for it, or has done a lot of practice, he can pull it off if things are right but it certainly not a shot for the average joe.  

Frankly, what the "average joe" can or cannot do is of little concern to me.  Nor do I know anyone that refuses a shot they are prepared for simply because "average joe" couldn't make it.

And sorry, a 3-4 foot drop is not necessarily the case at 500 yards.  A 27-30" drop with a maximum rise of 3" is fairly easy to achieve with a variety of cartridges and bullet weights.  That said, for someone familiar with their equipment a 3-4 foot drop is no big obstacle.

Special setups for long shots?  You mean like my stock Ruger M77 7mm Rem Mag with a simple duplex reticle?  Or my stock Ruger M77 MKII .300 Win Mag with a Burris Ballistic Plex reticle?  Or maybe you mean my stock Ruger .30-06, or .257 Roberts or Remington BDL .308 Win?  The only thing that makes any of thes rigs "special" is the fact that they are "mine".  And all get shot a 500 and 600 yards.
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Online Graybeard

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Re: Bullet choice ruled our hunt
« Reply #39 on: November 29, 2007, 03:37:14 AM »
It's YOUR fault NOT the bullet's fault when you select a bullet NOT designed by the manufacturer to do what you KNOW you're gonna do with it. I think some of you only bought and used them so you could bitch about them. Then some of you probably didn't even do that but just come here to bitch about them without even using them.

The vast majority of folks understand the proper use of the various bullets and select the correct bullet for the job at hand and then don't bitch and moan like cry babies if a poorly selected bullet fails to live up you their unrealistic expectations of it.

You are on a vendetta to put down one bullet maker who likely makes the best bullets out there and I'm getting sick and tired of it. You selected it knowing the characteristics of it and then piss and moan when it does what it was designed to do. Get a life and get over it or go somewhere else to piss and moan.


Bill aka the Graybeard
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I am not a lawyer and do not give legal advice.

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Offline beemanbeme

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Re: Bullet choice ruled our hunt
« Reply #40 on: November 29, 2007, 03:43:36 AM »
I've never denied the fact that I'm a dirty old man but I guess I'm a luddite too.  Folks keep talking about bullets for long range and bullets for short range and bullets to bust thru bone, and soft tissue bullets and........... All I gotta say is Damn!.  What happened to the good old days when you loaded up ole Blood and Thunder, stuck a few extras in your pocket, put a handerchief on top of them to keep them from rattling around, and went hunting?  If I tried to take ammo to match all the different possible scenerios I might encounter, I'd not only rattle, I'd probably weigh so much I couldn't even walk. And I'm sure I'd have the wrong ammo in the gun when Mr Big jumped out.  
What I am a luddite about is my gold standard of bullets are core lokts, NPs and Grand Slams.  I understand they've changed the way they make Grand Slams now but I've got a life time supply of the old type.  The longest shot I have ever made on a BG animal was 390 long steps to an antelope.  He stood broadside to me on a windless day in WY (a rarity in itself) while I doped out how far he was by using the plex of my scope. He looked about the size of a small lap dog.  I don't believe in driving a hunting bullet over 3000fps.  At the ranges I shot, it doesn't gain you anything in trajectory nor letality.  So the three bullets above have always worked well for me at short range, what I call long range, and in between.  
My "bullet failure" was with Speer 105gr Hot Core .243 bullets. 3 of them. My buddy said he could hear the bullets hitting the deer.  I later verified the zero on the rifle and I can't blame it.  The rifle was loaded hot.  Maybe that's why until this day I have an aversion to .243s, Hot Core bullets, and hyper velocities.    :-[

Offline rickt300

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Re: Bullet choice ruled our hunt
« Reply #41 on: November 29, 2007, 05:58:11 AM »
The shoulder blade really doesn't give a lot of resistance and Hitting it means there is going to be damage to the spine and the deer will go down. I was thinking this not penetrating the shoulder drama being played out here meant hitting the big end of the shoulder bone below the scapula.  Any lower the bone starts getting a lot smaller and won't give much resistance either. Since we are talking deer here I can't see any hunting weight Ballistic Tip being not able to provide plenty of penetration on a broadside shot though a lighter version "might" have trouble with the thick part of the upper leg bone and this is exactly where I don't shoot with any bullet. What for anyway when you have a direct track into the lungs by shooting a bit lower and behind the shoulder. Why damage so much meat for nothing? The size of Nebraska!
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Offline Mac11700

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Re: Bullet choice ruled our hunt
« Reply #42 on: November 29, 2007, 06:27:58 AM »


1 bullet to do all...for every body in every hunting situation..out of different guns...Nope...that ain't going to happen as long as people can't get it thru their heads they have to use the right bullet for the right job...and that they have to be able to shoot accurately...Until that happens...people will continue blaming the bullet...You don't honestly think they would take the blame for their own mistakes do you... ::)

Mac



Well, it certainly isn't going to happen with me using a BT, but there are a number of bullets that would fill the role of "1 bullet to do all" if we're talking big game hunting.  Although not my first choice, I would happily use a Partition in various cartridges for such a role.  Grand Slams served exactly that role for 2 decades without a problem.  These days North Fork's new sleeker bullets would be my first choice for reliable operation from the muzzle to way out there, but a Tipped TSX, Trophy Bonded and A-Frame would get my vote as well.

Yuo...your right...but ...1 bullet for everyone encompasses many different scenarios...different rifles...different hunting styles...different expectations of the bullet...different game..different yardages.... Your not ever going to please every one..even if one of the bullets were  perfect..

I know there isn't 1 perfect bullet that will work perfectly for every one...and to try to make 1 bullet work in every situation is dumb to me...maybe not to others...but to me is just plain dumb...Here's why I feel this way..I know...in most cases I will have some type of compromise...either I will have the chance of jumping a animal up close...shooting one under 100 yards..shooting one at a fields edge under 300 yards..or shooting one over 300 ....most of it will depend on where I am hunting....I look at the bullet as a tool...I wouldn't want to try to hold 2x4's together with 8 penny nails...nor would I want to have to do all my nailing with a 40 oz mallet...I don't try to make some thing work when I can choose the right tool and component...I'll select what works for the situation I am in...If I am going into an area with multiple shooting distances I will use a bullet that offers plenty of penetration and still holds together...If I am going to have a 500 yard shot..and also jump deer close...I'll use the best bonded bullet I can get with the highest BC  available that shoots well out of my rifle.....If I know I am going to just shooting from a ground blind out to 500 yards on some open field...then I select what rifle and bullet combination for where and what I am hunting... which  offers me the best chance at success...I have taken deer at this distance before with the CT bullets... I am not a 1 bullet/1 rifle hunter...I know full well...many folks are...and feel this is the best way to go about it..this is just a difference of opinion..I can accept a large exit wound on a deer if I hit it with a light weight big game BT up close...I know this will most likely be the case when I do...others can't accept this type of result...That's ok...that's their opinion...Some want the bullet to stay inside the animal...others don't..There again...it's a matter of opinion...We have a wide variety of bullets to choose from..many can work for multiple situations...but not all...for every one...Some may indeed come close..and are a good compromise. ..I know some of the thicker jackets don't open up enough or fail to open completely at certain yardages...others...like the BT's open up great at long yardages and over expand for others at close yardages...You can't expect ever bullet to work in ever situation...It isn't going to happen...Coyote Hunter has his ideal bullet...Nonya and 264 Win Mag have theirs...Super...The problem here isn't that 1 is junk...and the other not...The problem here is some one is  bitching & blaming the bullet for failing when they don't know it's the real reason for lost game..People will do this on any number of forums...not just here...Most of these issues can be attributed to this....

I don't like walking into any area blind...I go prepared...we live today...where we have satellite maps of this entire country...most of them good to very good...others still better than not knowing anything about it...They can show you what the area looks like so you can have an idea of what you will need...If folks can't or won't be prepared for where & what they are hunting and at what distance who's at fault...The bullet...I don't think so....like I said earlier...I.M.H.O. I feel most of the time...it's easier for folks blame the bullet...and not themselves...when things go wrong..

Mac
You can cry me a river... but...build me a bridge and then get over it...

Offline Jaydub in Wi

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Re: Bullet choice ruled our hunt
« Reply #43 on: November 29, 2007, 07:07:45 AM »
As I've said before, I was disappointed that a 180 b tip from a 300 win mag had a tough time with caribou. I was shooting out at 100 yds so velocity was 2800 or a bit less. I didn't shoot the shoulder on purpose, it was a moving and quartering to bull. After this incident, I sold all my b tips and bought X bullets and partitions. I'm not slamming btips the way some are, however I need a bullet more forgiving of "operator error". Also sometimes in the area where I hunt deer, a shoulder shot may be the best presented one. This is on public land and the deer get skitish very fast. good hunting

Offline NONYA

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Re: Bullet choice ruled our hunt
« Reply #44 on: November 29, 2007, 07:36:02 AM »
Well Bill the last THREE threads I have mentioned the poor performance of the bt were threads started by OTHER PEOPLE WITH THE SAME EXPERIENCE I HAD,they must all be in on my vendetta,my life long quest to destroy the perfect reputation of the Nosler BT.Seems to me people are figuring it out all on their own,my vendetta is complete,hunters everywhere are seeing exactly what I warned them of in Oct and every time I post in THEIR threads I get blasted for agreeing with their opinion of the bullet.Either nosler is supporting this site or some people are taking their brand loyalty to a whole new level.So many people with poor experiences and they are ALL to blame for their shot placement,reloading specs,situation choice,ect,ect.They just made the same mistake I did and assumed that when Nosler called it a hunting bullet it was going to work,like their other bullets have done for decades,we were wrong.
If it aint fair chase its FOUL,and illegal in my state!
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Offline Mac11700

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Re: Bullet choice ruled our hunt
« Reply #45 on: November 29, 2007, 07:51:12 AM »
Well Bill the last THREE threads I have mentioned the poor performance of the bt were threads started by OTHER PEOPLE WITH THE SAME EXPERIENCE I HAD,they must all be in on my vendetta,my life long quest to destroy the perfect reputation of the Nosler BT.Seems to me people are figuring it out all on their own,my vendetta is complete,hunters everywhere are seeing exactly what I warned them of in Oct and every time I post in THEIR threads I get blasted for agreeing with their opinion of the bullet.Either nosler is supporting this site or some people are taking their brand loyalty to a whole new level.So many people with poor experiences and they are ALL to blame for their shot placement,reloading specs,situation choice,ect,ect.They just made the same mistake I did and assumed that when Nosler called it a hunting bullet it was going to work,like their other bullets have done for decades,we were wrong.

Nonya...your just proving exactly what I've been saying all along...and your just wanting to use every instance of these co-called failures to slam them...and that is exactly what this thread is about...A SO CALLED FAILURE...There is nothing about brand loyalty here...that's just in your mind...

Mac
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Offline NONYA

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Re: Bullet choice ruled our hunt
« Reply #46 on: November 29, 2007, 08:25:55 AM »
These threads are about their poor performance,have you bothered to read them?Are all the other posters sharing stories of bt failures also misguided,confused and on a vendetta just like me?If its not brand/sponsor loyalty why would you take it so damn seriously?.If there weren't guys like you insinuating that my failure was a lie or the result of inept hunting ethics/research I wouldn't be so interested in these threads reporting exactly what I reported and got slammed for,it is happening to hunters everywhere,here and on other hunting forums the reports keep pouring in.I dont see you insulting and slamming all the other members here that report the same results.
If it aint fair chase its FOUL,and illegal in my state!
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Offline SHOOTALL

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Re: Bullet choice ruled our hunt
« Reply #47 on: November 29, 2007, 08:53:23 AM »
If the guy shoots to the same area ( not spot ) and has a spread as indicated by the first few post GB is right learn him to shoot !
now if the bullet didn't pass thru. the neck also as stated and also stated that it wouldn't go thru. a shoulder how dit it go thru. a shoulder and damage a lung ?
bubbles in blood are just that bubbles now a running deer with lung damage squirts out blood that looks like it came out a blender most of the time !
most likely a leg wound , a lung with a hole in it would act like a tire with a hole and keep it open , most of the time .
shame your friend had bad luck but to correct ya'll will need to be sure of the facts and only ya'll were there so take what is said as opinion not a slight ! and use it to help get him on target !
If ya can see it ya can hit it !

Offline Mac11700

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Re: Bullet choice ruled our hunt
« Reply #48 on: November 29, 2007, 08:54:33 AM »


I'm not the one trying to prove they are POS as you put it Nonya...What has been offered as proof in this thread isn't proof...but assumptions...Look at the facts...This hunter that the BT's supposedly failed for...claimed he didn't hit the deer...and yet when found...he shot it in the neck...The second deer was never found...was it...bone fragments were...Bone fragments can come from many places on a deer...not just the shoulder area...Please...and I am very serious here...Tell me how you can possibly rationalize this as a bullet failure...

As to your incident...I'll give you the benefit the doubts of myself & many...and say it is possible what happened to you was possible...but not probable...crap does happen...there is no doubt about this fact...BUT......your changing of your story here and else where has every thing to do with why there is indeed doubts...just as you not knowing the differences in the bullets and what is printed on the box or manuals...You take this as an insult...but you sir are the one who changed what you said...not me...How else are folks to take all of this...Am I supposed to just believe all of the folks who use these bullets and myself included don't know what we are talking about...just because you say so... You say your just voicing your opinion...but...it goes much further than that...and you know it...just as the management here knows it...and has told you...


Quote from: Nonya
I have the right to and i will contnue to slam the Nosler Bts,accubonds and CTs every chance I get,you gonna stop me? NO!
Quote from: Graybeard
No really you DO NOT! You may speak to problems that happened specifically but you MAY NOT out right condemn a manufacturer's products across the board just because you say you've had a bad result from them. Tens of thousands if not hundreds of thousands of hunters use those same bullets with total satisfaction each and every hunting season. That you cannot speaks volumes to me about your understanding of the proper use of them. To say all Nosler bullets are bad is just plain BS of the worst order.

I respect Nosler PTs perhaps above all others for use on game large and small. I've never had a bad result on game from use of a BT either and I've used a LOT of them on game. But I don't push them from magnum rifles to insane velocity and then use light for caliber bullets to shoot game up close. Instead I use heavy for caliber bullets and in non magnum chamberings and then don't worry about how close or far I am. They work beautifully and have for me every time so far.

So speak to specific results you had with a single bullet all you want but end the rant against Nosler in general. Your inappropriate use of the bullet doesn't constitute proof that their entire product line is bad as you seem to want the world to believe. Who at Nosler pissed in your cereal to make you so mad at them?

Mac
You can cry me a river... but...build me a bridge and then get over it...

Offline NONYA

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Re: Bullet choice ruled our hunt
« Reply #49 on: November 29, 2007, 09:25:11 AM »
Whatever,keep telling yourself it isnt the product.As the reports keep coming in you will have plenty of people to chastise for reporting exactly what happened.I guess you have never had a problem with a product and reported it here....
If it aint fair chase its FOUL,and illegal in my state!
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Offline SHOOTALL

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Re: Bullet choice ruled our hunt
« Reply #50 on: November 29, 2007, 09:44:40 AM »
To all those giving up on ballistic tips , please send all the un used bullets to me , i will dispose of them for ya'll one at a time !
If ya can see it ya can hit it !

Offline NONYA

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Re: Bullet choice ruled our hunt
« Reply #51 on: November 29, 2007, 09:55:31 AM »
Sorry SHOOT,i put em all through paper and gophers so i could load my brass with something dependable.
If it aint fair chase its FOUL,and illegal in my state!
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Offline Mnswede

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Re: Bullet choice ruled our hunt
« Reply #52 on: November 29, 2007, 12:48:10 PM »
I never lost a deer while using 130gr BT's in a 270 cal rifle.  I was never scared to shoot the deer at 360 yards nor the doe at 46 yards that ran 75 yards and then dropped dead.  The deer I had shot before the 46 yard doe was just over 60 yards and I could see the blood blowing out of the exit wound through the scope.  Yes, the bullet blew up inside the doe and didn't exit on the doe shot at 46 yards, but than Nosler stated in their reloading book that shooting BT's at over 3000 fps can cause the bullet to explode at close range.  As for shooting deer at 500 yds and over.  The average deer hunter can't  since they don't believe it's necessary to practice all year long and to know where the bullet goes under all conditions, tempatures, etc.  There are those that do and can, and the average and below hunter should probaly consider not to do so, JMHO.

Offline Coyote Hunter

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Re: Bullet choice ruled our hunt
« Reply #53 on: November 29, 2007, 05:04:52 PM »
"...we engineered the Ballistic Tip® Hunting bullet to be very predictable and extremely forgiving"  [Nosler web site]

"Fully tapered jacket and special lead alloy core allows controlled expansion and optimum weight retention at all practical velocity levels." [Nosler web site]

"Minimum Impact Velocity: 1600 fps ; Maximum Impact Velocity: 3000 fps" [Nosler web site]

Based on Nosler's own Min-Max velocity range of 1600-3000fps for the hunting grade BT's, here's the useable ranges for the BT ammo they produce (Bullet weight, bullet BC's and ammo velocities obtained from the Nosler web site, ranges calculated with Point Blank):

Nosler Ammo
.257 Weatherby, 100g BT, 3520fps  (BC=.393, useable range = 210-905yds)
.264 Win Mag, 100g BT, 3375fps  (BC=.350, useable range = 135-760yds)
.270 Weatherby, 130g BT, 3450fps  (BC=.433, useable range = 200-970yds)
7mm STW, 140g BT, 3360fps  (BC=.434, useable range = 160-935yds)
.300 RUM, 180g BT, 3250fps  (BC=.507, useable range = 135-1000+yds)

Draw your own conclusions.

Coyote Hunter
NRA, GOA, DAD - and I VOTE!

Offline NONYA

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Re: Bullet choice ruled our hunt
« Reply #54 on: November 29, 2007, 05:30:18 PM »
Mine were loaded well within their standards,controlled expansion my butt,it left the barrel at under 3000 fps so range wasnt a factor.
"predictable and extremely forgiving" predictable?YES,forgiving?only to the game.
If it aint fair chase its FOUL,and illegal in my state!
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Offline nomosendero

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Re: Bullet choice ruled our hunt
« Reply #55 on: November 29, 2007, 05:40:58 PM »
In my case it forgave them while killing them!  ;D
You will not make peace with the Bluecoats, you are free to go.

Offline NONYA

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Re: Bullet choice ruled our hunt
« Reply #56 on: November 29, 2007, 06:02:10 PM »
Kinda like the crusades. :o
If it aint fair chase its FOUL,and illegal in my state!
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Offline Mac11700

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Re: Bullet choice ruled our hunt
« Reply #57 on: November 29, 2007, 07:53:48 PM »
Mine were loaded well within their standards,controlled expansion my butt,it left the barrel at under 3000 fps so range wasnt a factor.
"predictable and extremely forgiving" predictable?YES,forgiving?only to the game.

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The Nosler 30 168-grain Ballistic Tip® is designed for match type loads and to provide hunters with a predictable and forgiving bullet for unpredictable and unforgiving situations nature throws their way.

It's interesting how just a few words can change the meaning...isn't it...

Some body...any body.....please answer a few question for me...

Given only the facts posted by 264Win...relating only to this instance...keeping any prejudice or bias out of the equation...Given the facts exactly as he has given them...How does what he described constitute a bullet failure ...I really would like to hear from some one on this...It's not to belittle any one...or to argue with any one...but just to give me an incite on this...I would like to know how this conclusion was formulated...is it just taking a persons word on faith...with out comprehending what was written...?I'll be glad to correspond  via PM if you prefer in hopes of trying to understand your logic on this issue.A few feel it is...I don't...No one really has explained the why yet...and I really would like to discuss this...in hopes understanding others thought process...I have always examined what was written...trying my best not to take  any thing out of context...Some times this is difficult..especially when wording is left out...usually.... clarification is asked for what I am unsure of.....but...I take it as it is written...then proceed to break it down for review...Some may post 1 thing...but...mean something else...Some may change what they have said along the way...OK...no one is perfect...but when a story is posted about a bullet failing...like in this case...When is an assumption supposed to be taken as proof ?   More importantly...WHY ?

Mac
You can cry me a river... but...build me a bridge and then get over it...

Offline NONYA

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Re: Bullet choice ruled our hunt
« Reply #58 on: November 29, 2007, 08:04:00 PM »
Can you prove it didnt? ::)
If it aint fair chase its FOUL,and illegal in my state!
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Offline Mac11700

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Re: Bullet choice ruled our hunt
« Reply #59 on: November 29, 2007, 08:24:47 PM »
Can you prove it didnt? ::)

No...I can't...but...I am not the one stating it did...Others have though...Normally...if you are stating an opinion...a person says it is an opinion...not a fact..Reading thru several post...this was said...

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It really wasn't a fact of not being able to find the deer that night (the 9 point). The guy who did the shooting hasn't hunted much for deer and when the deer ran off he assumed he missed it.He came back to the camp and told me that he missed.  It wasn't until the next morning that he saw blood while hunting on the same stand.

Now...you and I both know a few things Cole...We both have shot more than just a few animals in our lives...What is this telling you...I know what it is telling me...He didn't know where he hit the deer...He was an inexperienced hunter...not 1 time...but 2 times...from the same stand...

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The second day we went hunting I got a shot at two deer at around 450 yards. I hit the first one good and she went into the woods and dropped. I took a shot on the second one, but she turned at the last second and I barely grazed her back end...I know this because she came out again the next morning on another stand inside the woods close to where I took the first shot at...this time I didn't miss and dropped her in her tracks. The same evening my buddy took a shot on a doe. He messed up and hit it in the shoulder. I went into the field to track it down...there was fragments of bone that appeared to have come from the shoulder and a pretty good blood trail. I followed the blood trail into the woods, but the further we went the blood got further and further apart between spots. Eventually the blood trail went to about every 15 feet, then every 30 feet, and then was non-existent. We never found the second deer he shot.

If a shoulder is blown out enough to leave chunks of bone to give up lung blood...that deer won't travel far unless pushed hard...Another possibility...Your not a beginner hunter...you should know this...Is the lungs the only place you can get oxygenated blood from that shows up while tracking? Is the shoulder the only place on a deer you can get bone fragments from a bad hit?

Mac

You can cry me a river... but...build me a bridge and then get over it...