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Pretty provocative thread title here...


Originally Posted by 16penny
If you put Taco Bell sauce in your ramen noodles it tastes just like poverty
GB1

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Originally Posted by SLM
This could be epic.



whats the over/under on page count? I give it 7 pages by end of the month. and a revival in 2022. smile

any takers? it has all the right ingredients.


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Things can and do go wrong, but to think that a .300 Win Mag and some garden variety 200 grain bullet would have killed that bull with the same hold is laughable at best. 20 MPH crosswind at 300 yards will absolutely blow any .308 bullet several inches off course, even the mighty 212 ELD.

Glad it was a clean miss. I am sure Randy is too.



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The cartridge had absolutely nothing to do with that miss.

I would say the nut behind the trigger needed some adjustment, as we all have at one time of another.



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I'm just glad to see that I'm not the only one who doesn't quite buy into the .300wm laser beam hypothesis....

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And I'll guess 6 pages on the under/over

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The .308 Win. is ÜBER.

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Not another thread! Must still be winter out there.


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Lots of opinions but nothing yet from the one that matters the most.

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I been thinking about this today at work. Game of inches..........HELLO it is an ELK! Perhaps the big lesson here is when he chose to engage the target. The kill zone was very compressed. IF and I mean IF ( those are the two biggest letters in the English language when used alone ) he had waited for the target to expand as in the bull becoming more broadside the game of inches would have doubled if not tripled. Anyways hind sight is always 20 20. Very fun to watch...glad no one got hurt or wounded, and I sure didn't see the star of the movie bust his rifle over his knee like Bo Jackson did his baseball bat or wrap it around a tree like a golfer might his club. He acted more like a good major league pitcher, " I missed, this is why, I am gonna get over it. Batter up!"


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I'm in the "20 mph wind - it wasn't the cartridge fault" club. Wind is the reason I don't shoot long range on animals. I know all kinds of gadgets exist to read the wind but I've yet to see one that tells me how consistent the wind is between the end of my rifle and the target on yonder ridge. Flame suit on.

I'll also give an attaboy to BigFin - he is the real deal and is not afraid of showing thats he's actually a real dude. My favorite TV hunting show.

Last edited by bwinters; 03/24/17.

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You don't need gadgets, you need to read all the in between indicators that tell you whats going on.

Granted that took us probably from about 89 to about 01 or so to become top notch at shooting lots of LR and mostly every weekend or so....


We can keep Larry Root and all his idiotic blabber and user names on here, but we can't get Ralph back..... Whiskey Tango Foxtrot, over....
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Originally Posted by TheBigSky
Originally Posted by szihn
I own and shoot 308 Winchesters, 30-06s and 300 magnums.
All are fine on elk. I know form personal experience.

The idea that the extra speed is super important is not factual. In a few cases it's slightly helpful, but only slightly.

I have been shooting for over 50 years now, and when I was a US Marine it's safe to say I was somewhat of a "specialist" in long shots with a 308. I have enough experience to say without doubt that the velocity difference between my 300 magnum and my 308 is not important enough to make real differences on elk.

It gets a bit more noticeable on antelope and even more noticeable on targets the size of coyotes. That is because of the smaller kill area (target)

As soon as you start to need hold overs and hold offs you the shooter need to HOLD! It's about you, not the cartridge.

Sure, my 300 is a bit easier to make hits with on smaller targets at a bit more range, but not near the advantage most shooters seem to think.

For example if you have a trajectory that needs a 14" hold over or a 16" hold off, you have to hold it. So if you can hold 14" you can just as easily hold 20" If you can push into the wind 14" you can just as easily push into the wind 19".

But if you need to hold over or hold off and don't know your trajectories or your hold-offs, you should not be shooting. You should get closer so you don't need them. Or you should learn them.

If you have that much trouble that you think you need to buy a faster gun you probably really need two things a lot more.
#1 You need to learn you holds for your gun and your load.
#2 you need to learn to hunt better (In other words how to get closer)

This advice comes from someone that has shot out the rifling out of several barrels in several rifles and in 4 different handguns. I am pretty good at making long shots. And I don't. I see no need for it.

Not that I think 400 is "long" but without trying to brag, I can assure you that when you measure your shooting not in hundreds of rounds fired, but in many barrels shot out, you learn something about shooting.

When I was a young man I shot for a living and I qualified out to 1000 yards for Uncle Sam. (with a 308 I might add) But deer and elk are not enemies and I respect them enough to not fire when I think I can hit the kill zone. I only fire when I know I can hit the kill zone. I get closer.
Do I have to?
No!
I stand a good chance of making clean kills at longer ranges, but why would I want to? I am a good enough hunter that I find very very very few times I can shoot 700+ that I can't easily get 200 to 300 closer.

Now this good man who made the vid is commendable in my eyes because he told the whole truth. He made no excuses and didn't blame circumstances. I like that! He's human. He made a mistake and learned from it. So did I. That's why I am writing this. Good for him and all those like him.

A 300-super-duper-stupendous-ultra-uber-mag would not have made any real difference in 99% of the cases.
Why?
Because such guns have very short barrel lives and the shooter is going to learn more from shooting 7,000 round in practice than he is from shooting 700 and needing a new barrel. Re-barrel jobs cost a lot more then practice ammo and reloading components.

IF you are wealthy enough to shoot those throats out and re-barrel and re-barrel and re-barrel and re-barrel you will become an excellent shooter. But not near as fast as you would if you were using a 308 or 30-06. And I can tell you without ANY hesitation the 308 and 30-06 as well as many other cartridges are just fine for killing elk. Not from reading about it, but from doing it for all my life.

I am not saying that are not some very good shots out there who do their shooting with super magnums. There are!

But there are a LOT more out there with 270s 308s and 30-06s because the money was spent on practice ammo instead of new guns, new glass, new barrels and so on.

New and "Improved" is usually only new.

And that newness is usually just a re-shaped brass 'powder bottle' that approximates something we have had for 30 years and sometimes up to 100 years.

In shooting, paper of meat, the equation ALWAYS boils down to being 98% the shooter and 2% what he shoots.


Your experience mirrors mine and I agree with all you wrote. Well said (written).


+2

It's all about the nut behind the butt.


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Originally Posted by rost495
You don't need gadgets, you need to read all the in between indicators that tell you whats going on.

Granted that took us probably from about 89 to about 01 or so to become top notch at shooting lots of LR and mostly every weekend or so....



Now surely you wouldn't represent that with all of this practice that you, or anyone else for that matter, including Hodnett and/or all of his pupils, Tubb, etc can perform first shot hits every time?


It is irrelevant what you think. What matters is the TRUTH.
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Originally Posted by JGRaider
Originally Posted by rost495
You don't need gadgets, you need to read all the in between indicators that tell you whats going on.

Granted that took us probably from about 89 to about 01 or so to become top notch at shooting lots of LR and mostly every weekend or so....



Now surely you wouldn't represent that with all of this practice that you, or anyone else for that matter, including Hodnett and/or all of his pupils, Tubb, etc can perform first shot hits every time?

Exactly! Reading wind is still a guess.

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Originally Posted by szihn


The shooter is going to learn more from shooting 7,000 round in practice than he is from shooting 700




The reason so many hunters miss in the field shooting magnums is the lack of practice downrange for the sake of ones shoulder.

13 years ago when I graduated from my 300 win mag to a 270 the first thing I noticed was I started shooting "a lot" more.
The difference in recoil of a 270 with a 130 vs the 300 win mag with a 180 or 200 is astounding.

Threading needles in a 20 mph wind at 300 with my 300 win mag that I "never" practiced with much....not so much!

Threading needles with the 270 that is on its 3rd barrel? Easy peasy!

This thread is a typical case of believing the equipment gets it done and not practice.

I'd recommend the hunter practice a lot more. If the 308 is uncomfortable to shoot a lot "and they can be" then step "UP" to a 6.5 creedmoor not "DOWN" to a 300 win mag!



Trystan


Last edited by Trystan; 03/25/17.

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Originally Posted by Trystan
[quote=szihn]


This thread is a typical case of believing the equipment gets it done and not practice.

I'd recommend the hunter practice a lot more. If the 308 is uncomfortable to shoot a lot "and they can be" then step "UP" to a 6.5 creedmoor not "DOWN" to a 300 win mag!




I'm not sure you watched the video.

Randy is shooting a .308 that he practices with regularly. He even admits that after the shot he realized he failed to account for the wind.

The OP could probably use your advice though!!

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Originally Posted by duckhunter175
Originally Posted by Trystan
[quote=szihn]


This thread is a typical case of believing the equipment gets it done and not practice.

I'd recommend the hunter practice a lot more. If the 308 is uncomfortable to shoot a lot "and they can be" then step "UP" to a 6.5 creedmoor not "DOWN" to a 300 win mag!




I'm not sure you watched the video.

Randy is shooting a .308 that he practices with regularly. He even admits that after the shot he realized he failed to account for the wind.

The OP could probably use your advice though!!


I watched the entire video. It made for some good early morning entertainment with a cup of coffee 😀

Maybe it was just a case of CRS on the hunters part. That can happen as the years creep up. 😢 Lol

It a mistake I'm sure he won't make again. A hold for the wind at 300 in 20 mph wind is a pretty easy task on an elk sized target. Had Randy remembered to hold there is no way he'd have missed that shot. It looked to me like the bullet clipped the hide by the way the bull moved back.



Trystan

Last edited by Trystan; 03/25/17.

Good bullets properly placed always work, but not everyone knows what good bullets are, or can reliably place them in the field
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My observation is must hunters can't hit squat much past 100 yards or so, magnum or not.

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It sure didn't seem like there was a 20mph wind in the video. The tree branches by the bull weren't moving at all. But it could have just been the video.

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