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Elk Ammo?
I have a new 300 Win Mag that I will be elk hunting with this year. I am a big fan of the Barnes TSX bullet. I wanted to use the Barnes Vor-Tex 180gr TSX but can't find it anywhere.
Any suggestions on other 180gr ammo that will work well on elk and retain its weight? Was also thinking of the Nosler Accubond if I can't find the Barnes. Thoughts? |
Accubond, Partition, Swift Aframe will all work fine on elk as long as you stick with the 180-200gr. My wife's 300win is loaded with 180gr partition, while my 300RUM is 200gr partitions. You may lose a minimal amount of weight, but it will be insignificant and the bullet will perform fine.
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Black Hills and Cor-Bon also load the Barnes bullet in this caliber.
Federal also has a similar offering cheaper price wise than those previously mentioned. |
I would suggest hand loading the TSX if you can find the components. In every rifle that I have used the TSX the length of the loaded cartridge was a big deal as far as accuracy is concerned, and that can only be tailored through hand loading.
I have taken a quite a few elk with a .300 Win. Mag. using the Nosler Partition 180. The Accubond shoots a bit better in my rifles than the Partition, but I have only taken a couple of elk with it so far (it worked just fine). The Barnes bullets certainly have many fans, and great advertising, but I have had some problems with them. They usually work just great, but I have had some problems with expansion in cases where impact velocity was a bit lower than the TSX likes. As long as the velocity is sufficiently high the TSX is an extremely effective bullet. |
You can spend all that money on those bullets or you can buy 180gr Rem Corlok PSP for $21. I have absolutely no problem killing elk with them.
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Originally Posted by deernutz
(Post 4074767)
You can spend all that money on those bullets or you can buy 180gr Rem Corlok PSP for $21. I have absolutely no problem killing elk with them.
180 gr. 30 caliber rifle bullets were designed with elk in mind. Those made in USA anyway. I've heard all the malarkey about Core Lokts and Power Points not being "effective on elk size game". BS Nothing wrong with an expensive premium bullet, but they won't turn a poorly placed shot into a kill and they won't kill any quicker with a well placed shot than a standard C&C bullet. I'm all for the guys making a buck by selling high end bullets but I throw the flag when somebody says they are necessary to kill large animals. |
I couldn't agree more. But I'm old school and ignorant. LOL
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Originally Posted by Bullcamp82834
(Post 4075104)
Absolutely.
180 gr. 30 caliber rifle bullets were designed with elk in mind. Those made in USA anyway. I've heard all the malarkey about Core Lokts and Power Points not being "effective on elk size game". BS Nothing wrong with an expensive premium bullet, but they won't turn a poorly placed shot into a kill and they won't kill any quicker with a well placed shot than a standard C&C bullet. I'm all for the guys making a buck by selling high end bullets but I throw the flag when somebody says they are necessary to kill large animals. The best performance I watched last season was a bull elk that was set back on his hindquarters, shot through the heart we found later, finally rolled over, thrashed around for half a minute or less, and finally bled out. Great performance if you're bowhunting, but for a bullet out of a .300 WSM? The bullet was a "pass-through" as well, which is part of the reason I'm not convinced they're worth the metal they're made of. Blood trails are for bowhunters. If you're not putting an animal down nearly in his tracks with a rifle, something's not quite right with what you're doing or using. I'm sticking to my simple C&C Hornadys. They worked in the past, and they still work today. No hesitation from me if I have to buy cheap Core-Lokts. |
My elk didn't fuss much when hit with a 150gr partition out of a 7mm rem mag.
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180 grain Nolser Partition & 300 Win mag are like peanut butter & jelly.
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Mine fall down when hit with Hornady or Speer. They fall down when hit with Noslers too.
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I decided to go with the Nosler Accubonds. Thanks for all the input.
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My gunsmith shoots a .280. He's killed a bull elk every year for the last 55 years with core-lokts.
He laughs at magnums, and premium bullets. I should say we laugh together. |
I killed my last four elk with a .30-06. I bought a 300 WM because I wanted a new gun and I could. Who's laughing now?
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cabelas had lots of vortex 300 win mag when I looked online the other day. I just bought my 3rd 300 win mag and was looking for ammo for it. look me up when you get to colo
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Originally Posted by Rob in VT
(Post 4075411)
I killed my last four elk with a .30-06. I bought a 300 WM because I wanted a new gun and I could. Who's laughing now?
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OK......
Who is next in "my new toy is better than your new toy" ? |
No reason to claim you bought something, because you can. As if nobody else can.
Lame bragging. |
No reason to go off topic either. If you recall, I didn't ask for an opinion on magnums vs non magnums but rather an opinion on 300 WM ammo. You began the "laughing" dialog.
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I gave you an answer. Core-lokts. You didn't like it, but it's all you need to kill an elk, and half the price of what you bought.
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Originally Posted by Rob in VT
(Post 4075318)
I decided to go with the Nosler Accubonds. Thanks for all the input.
The Accubond is a good choice. I have not been able to recover one yet (all exited) to see what they look like after impact. You chose the 180 grain pill, didn't you? |
Big Uncle, yes I went with the 180s. I have always preferred the heavier bullet vs a lighter one.
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