Free: Contests & Raffles.
There was a reason I chose the 308 for my guide gun while in the business - just about anyone shoots it well and it flat out hammers bear! And elk and deer and coyotes and bobcats... It's performance throughout the available bullet choices is very consistant. So just about every bullet choice works well out of that velocity...except perhaps Barnes which really perform better at a bit higher velocity. Anything from 150 grain on up has busted shoulders and broken them down well. Though I rarely ever approved a hunter shooting more than 250 yards on a bear.I can only remember tracking one bear shot with the 308. That bear was shot twice in the spine at 20 yards. Once above the diaphragm and once just in from of the hip. Not sure a faster 30 cal would have made much of a difference there. Bear was recovered after I put a 45 slug in his boiler room at 20' while the dog held him down.I've probably tracked more bear shot with the 338wm than any other gun cartridge. Though I don't remember ever tracking a bear shot through the heart/lungs. Most just don't handle the big magnums well. Especially under stress.One of the biggest problems I had with guys shooting magnum cartridges is that they always wanted to take that 400 yard shot. Bear heart/lung is a dang small target. And it's not where most think it is. Guys with a bit smaller cartridge seemed more apt to take shot within their effective range (99% that's under 200 yards). No cartridge is a bear stopper with improper bullet placement. And they all are good bear medicine when bullets end up where they are suppose to. Bear are easier to kill than deer when bullets strike the right spot. And they are as tough as any elk when those bullets don't hit the right spot.I'd happily shoot any black bear on earth with either of those cartridge choices. They are both good medicine as long as you shoot them both well.
Been on over 450 bear kills... shoot the gun that you can handle. 30 Cal is great, I used a 350 mag as a back up gun and never needed more, but then the only "touchy" issue I was ever in I used a 44 mag revolver to stop the bear, 1st shot in jaw, second in top of head- full out charge on one of the bigger bears we ever got, just a tad over 300 lbs... stopped him at 4 yds from me.... Fun!!!!I believe Ralph Flowers shot a .270 more than anything else- great read.Guide in Canada, one of my best friends uses a .338 and is happy, again what can you shoot the most accurate is what I would say you should focus on....My cousin has literally killed countless boars in CA. with 243 with 85 grain bullets (shame on him for not using enough gun) yeah, right... trying telling him that..... Anyways, its always fun debating....
What bullets do you want to shoot?How does a .308 shoot 180 grain bullets? Is that a consideration? Seems I've seen lots of threads on here in the past about how bears don't bleed or are hard to track. I want to sling as much lead into one as possible. I'd work through the flinch and shoot the .300 win mag and some 180 accubonds.
Quote from: jackelope on February 10, 2014, 01:42:41 PMWhat bullets do you want to shoot?How does a .308 shoot 180 grain bullets? Is that a consideration? Seems I've seen lots of threads on here in the past about how bears don't bleed or are hard to track. I want to sling as much lead into one as possible. I'd work through the flinch and shoot the .300 win mag and some 180 accubonds.my .308 likes 180 grain bullets never shot it outside of 100 yards tho, may not perform right beyond that, but for 100 yards or less, which is what i have it for, the 180s are the ticket. 1 : 12 twist, older gunand its what i will be using for bear this year. hopefully in april rather than september
Quote from: deaner on February 19, 2014, 04:59:32 PMQuote from: jackelope on February 10, 2014, 01:42:41 PMWhat bullets do you want to shoot?How does a .308 shoot 180 grain bullets? Is that a consideration? Seems I've seen lots of threads on here in the past about how bears don't bleed or are hard to track. I want to sling as much lead into one as possible. I'd work through the flinch and shoot the .300 win mag and some 180 accubonds.my .308 likes 180 grain bullets never shot it outside of 100 yards tho, may not perform right beyond that, but for 100 yards or less, which is what i have it for, the 180s are the ticket. 1 : 12 twist, older gunand its what i will be using for bear this year. hopefully in april rather than september1:12" barrel will like 155's and 168's all day. If you reload, about 44-45gr of Varget does well in almost every rifle I've shot.