The perfect slug gun for deer?
I started my hunting with a bow. After several deer over several years I expanded to ML as well. For 2012 I decided to build a perfect slug gun for the New England woods.
I settled on a savage 220, scoped, shooting Remmington Accutip 2 3/4" slugs. The gun shoots silly groups to 100 yards. I shot three deer this season. Each broadside. I failed to pass through any of the deer. I killed them quickly, but the lack of penetration has me thinking I may have an experience that makes me regret this combination and it's lack of pass through power. Three shots and three dead deer. Should I be satisfied? |
Yep, dead is dead!
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Barnes Expander
I'm a big Barnes expander tip guy, Take a look see here. 1 inch drop @ 200 yards ain't bad. That said, like Top Gun said...dead is dead. Try out different lines and compare, if nothing else, you will have some fun.:party0005:
http://www.shootingtimes.com/2010/09...advart_201007/ |
hornady sst's great slugs
remington coppersolids great slugs and the federal barnes has more than 1 inch of drop read the whole article. it says 4 inch high at 95 yds dead on at 167yds 4 inch low at 195 yds and less than an inch more at 200 yrds. so basically 5 inch low at 200 yds which is right on par with the hornady 20 gauge ammo Federal’s current 275-grain Expander Tipped 20-gauge sabot load at 1,900 fps nominal velocity. Sighted-in for maximum point-blank range on an 8-inch-diameter target (the approximate diameter of a whitetail deer’s vital area), the maximum 4-inch rise over line of sight is at 95 yards, dead zero comes at 167 yards, and drop below 4 inches comes at 195 yards. Drop at 200 yards is less than an inch more Read more: http://www.shootingtimes.com/2010/09...#ixzz2GsUh2ber |
ooh good
Originally Posted by snapper1982
(Post 4023163)
hornady sst's great slugs
remington coppersolids great slugs and the federal barnes has more than 1 inch of drop read the whole article. it says 4 inch high at 95 yds dead on at 167yds 4 inch low at 195 yds and less than an inch more at 200 yrds. so basically 5 inch low at 200 yds which is right on par with the hornady 20 gauge ammo Federal’s current 275-grain Expander Tipped 20-gauge sabot load at 1,900 fps nominal velocity. Sighted-in for maximum point-blank range on an 8-inch-diameter target (the approximate diameter of a whitetail deer’s vital area), the maximum 4-inch rise over line of sight is at 95 yards, dead zero comes at 167 yards, and drop below 4 inches comes at 195 yards. Drop at 200 yards is less than an inch more Read more: http://www.shootingtimes.com/2010/09...#ixzz2GsUh2ber |
hornady ssts are great i use them in my gun they shoot pretty flat we shot it in at 50yds and it was still hitting the bulleseye at 130Yds
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I would be worried about not getting a pass through. I lost my best buck, until this season anyway, to a shot that had no pass through. It left no sign of a hit and sadly I didn't search too hard thinking I missed. Found the deer a few days later.
I switched to Nosler Partitions to get pass throughs. So you might consider finding a round that will pass through just to get a blood trail in case one runs. |
Sorry, but just because a projectle passes thorugh an animal doesn't mean it's better than one that doesn't. If it hasn't expanded and dropped most of it's energy in the animal, it may well not have done as much damage as the projectile that didn't exit. If it did, then yes, two holes are probably better than one. It sounds as if your not searching too hard after the hit was more the problem than the projectile not doing what it was supposed to.
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Originally Posted by tight360
(Post 4023190)
thanks for getting that straightened out, because you know, the article was there. Did I miss speak? Good thing you read the whole article.
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I shoot the same slugs out of my SuperNova for the last 4 years (4 dead deer) now and had only one not pass all the way thru.
It was a full frontal shot and passed the full length of the deers body (big doe), snapped the front leg, rear leg bone and ended up just under the skin by the tail where I retrieved it. I estimated that the distance traveled inside the deer was close to 24" plus breaking 2 leg bone, not bad performance. Below is the slug that I retrieved from the deer, .920" expansion |
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