Now I'm really beggining to understand...not only does he dislike magnums...but he is a Premium bullet hater as well and this speaks volumes..
No, you are assuming too much. Premium bullets have their place. I think I even recomended them if you plan to take Texas heart shots earlier in this thread. (I however don't recomend such a thing unless it's on an already wounded deer as was the case in the scenario earlier in this thread)
Of course, you’d better have them loaded in the magazine if you’re going to take such a shot (a THS to stop a wounded animal).
My point was that by using these large mags at very short range where impact velocities are well over 3000 fps a lot of people are creating a need for expensive ultra tough bullets that normally should not exist. With impact velocities in the 2600 to 3000 fps range standard cup and core lead bullets are all you would ever need for our deer down here. I speak having killed somewhere around 80 to 90 in my lifetime with such bullets. So what these people end up with is a lot more recoil, a lot more muzzle blast, more ear splitting boom and for what? The bullets they eventually gravitate towards using to lessen the excess meat damge and prevent core jacket separation have to be so tough to hold together at these impact speeds that they don't expand any more or kill any faster than a standard rifle bullet. So IMHO whats the point?
Since impact velocities can be very close to muzzle velocity (a friend shot an elk that was standing under the same tree he was under), I’m much more comfortable using cup and core bullets where the muzzle velocity is 2800fps or less. (Most people I know would consider muzzle velocities of 2800-2900fps maximum for cup and core bullets, but based on personal experience I tend to be a bit more conservative.) Even if we use 3000fps for the cutoff, there are many non-magnum cartridges that will reach that velocity with a hunting weight bullet.
Just a few factory loads:
.243 Winchester = WW 95g Ballistic Silvertip (3100fps), Federal 95g Ballistic Tip (3025fps)
.25-06 = Winchester 115g Ballistic Silvertip (3060fps), Federal 100g Ballistic Tip (3210fps)
.270 Winchester = Winchester 130g Ballistic Silvertip (3050fps), Federal 130g Ballistic Tip (3060fps)
.280 Remington = Winchester 140g Ballistic Silvertip (3040fps)
.30-06 = Winchester 125g PSP (3125fps)
If we threw in factory loads that went over 2950fps the list would be much longer and bullet weights would go up.
Here’s a representative list for handloaded cartridges (again using a 3000fps cutoff and Nosler 5th and Hodgdon 2004 Annual Manual as references):
.243 Winchester, up to 100g
.250 Savage, up to 100g
.257 Roberts, up to 100g
.257 Roberts AI, up to 115g
.25-06, up to 117g
6.5x55 Mauser, up to 120g
.260 Remington, up to 125g
.270 Winchester, up to 140g
7x57mm Mauser, up to 120g
7mm-08, up to 130g
.284 Winchester, up to 139g
.280 Remington, up to 140g
300 Savage, up to 125g
.308 Winchester, up to 150/155g
.30-06, up to 165/168g
Again, if we used 2950fps as the cutoff, the list would be longer and bullet weights would go up.
Based on your own 3000fps criteria, the use of premium bullets is called for in many cases even with non-magnums.
IMHO, the ‘hellstorm’ as you call it was not caused by your advocacy of standard cartridges but rather the manner in which you did it – which included needless ad hominem attacks against various individuals and what I and others consider misrepresentations of the facts.
I adressed no individual specifically until they started attacking my quotes specifically. Go back and look at who directed a post at a specific person first. I have said at least 4 times now that if the descriptions of some of the local over gunned flinchers don't apply to you them why are you pissed? I left room for exceptions in every comment that I made yet some completely overreacted. Sounds like some of you are a tad too insecure.
Addressing specific points made by individuals does not constitute an ad hominem attack. It does, however, provide clarity in long threads. Here are some examples of ad hominem attack:
“Yeah but he had a crop field too huh? I'm sure he wouldn't have bought one for a backyard garden. Well, on second thought he was kin to you so maybe so.”
“Reading skills...... they're important.”
“George break out the "Thinks He's Funny but Isn't Detector" Holy crap Sam it's reading off the scale.”
“Wait, did I miss it. When did you make a logical argument?”
There are other examples, but these should suffice. They are, of course, all quotes of statements made by you.
You talk about “average” distances of 100 yards, then later talk about open croplands where long shots can be expected. So you solution is what – take two rifles and only use the magnum if a long shot is presented?
No, I'd take a 25-06 or a 270 and kill anything from zero to as far as I could consistently hit it. Which for me is about 400 yards with a good rested position. (Don't have anywhere to practice any farther than that) And let me tell you I don't care what kind of rifle you carry unless you are going to sight it in 4 inches high at 100 yards (Which would be ridiculous here) then you are going to have to know the proper hold over at 400. Even sighting that high at 100 yards only a few of the most powerful mags are going eradicate hold over at 400.
I don’t know anyone that sights their rifles 4” high at 100 yards. Most go 2-1/2” to 3”. I generally zero mine for Maximum Point Blank Range using a 6” diameter target, but somewhere I read that 2.8” high at 100 yards is generally a good number. If we use that and compare two loads from Nosler 5th, a 165g Ballistic Tip at 2882fps in a .30-06 and 3260fps in a .300 Win Mag, the .300 Win adds 50 yards to the point where the bullet drop is 10” below Point Of Aim (350 yards and 400 yards respectively). To a person without a laser range finder (read “most hunters”), that can be significant.
And by far the most misinformed locals I know concerning bullet drop at such distances are the magnum men. Why? Because they have bought into the hype about their new magnum hook line and sinker and have a vastly overinflated opinion of it's trajectory. I know this because I talk to them all the time. The fact that such trajectory myths persist year after year here are testiment to two things; One, how rare it is that a 400 yard shot actually presents itself and two, that virtually none of these guys have actually fired any practice shots at 400 yards to see the reality of their new magnums trajectory.
Here in Colorado people read ballistic charts pretty well. Or use ballistic calculators. I see guys at the range making shots at 200, 300, 400 and 500 yards on a regular basis. They know the trajectories, which is why they keep hitting their targets. Magnums or non-magnums, doesn’t seem to make a difference.
I can’t tell you how many shot opportunities I have had that were over 400 yards, but I can sum it up in one word: “many”.
why do you carry a .30-06, 7mm-08 or .25-06 instead of a .30-30?
Basically because of the guns offered in said calibers. I like highly accurate bolt guns and the 30-30 is pretty much a lever action gun. To be truthful though I probably have only killed 3 deer in the last 10 years that I couldn't have killed with a 30-30 and a straight 4 or 6 power scope. And I am seriously considering getting another 30-30 as I currently do not have one. A fact I consider to be a mark of shame for any rifleman.
In other words a valid reason to carry “too much gun” would be because you like to?
Just how far out were those deer? I shoot my .30-30 at 300 yards on a regular basis and, when the wind is steady or not blowing, can hit a kill-zone sized gong every time. With my 170g loads the drop is only 18” and the retained energy is still 867fpe – that’s more than enough to kill a deer and about what my .44 Mag loads retain at 70 yards. When I had my Marlin .375Win and .45-70 at the NRA Whittington Center, I was knocking down the 500-meter rams on 4 out of every 5 shots, using 4x scopes on both rifles. I thought you said you could shoot well – what do you mean by “I probably have only killed 3 deer in the last 10 years that I couldn't have killed with a 30-30”? If it’s all just a matter of knowing the range and trajectory...