Free: Contests & Raffles.
NO, I am saying that an elk that is hit doesn't always act the way you expect them to. That elk was dead on it's feet but making for a getaway. In the snow, in Montana, he wasn't going to get away either. His liver and one lung were gone to pulp. An elk is one tough hombre' is what I am saying. If an elk is not broken down with both shoulders broken and the bullet has not done serious lung damage I would not bet on bringing it to bag.
Is this 800 foot pound number something that the OP and Bobcat can agree on?
I was vacationing and shot a spike elk around Redlodge, thirty plus years ago, using my father's loaned 270 Model 70. I hit him in the chest at an angle from behind and the bullet wrecked his offside shoulder and he went down. But that quick he was on his feet and going away at a good pace when my second shot at about two hundred yards spined him. This first shot was at < 70 yards and that made me come to respect elk as a tough customer
Quote from: dontgetcrabs on December 26, 2015, 06:43:56 PMQuote from: JDHasty on December 26, 2015, 06:37:40 PMI was vacationing and shot a spike elk around Redlodge, thirty plus years ago, using my father's loaned 270 Model 70. I hit him in the chest at an angle from behind and the bullet wrecked his offside shoulder and he went down. But that quick he was on his feet and going away at a good pace when my second shot at about two hundred yards spined him. This first shot was at < 70 yards and that made me come to respect elk as a tough customer. So now you're saying a 270 isn't enough gun either? and since he made a poor shot with a bow, a 6.5 G is inadequate for large game.
Quote from: JDHasty on December 26, 2015, 06:37:40 PMI was vacationing and shot a spike elk around Redlodge, thirty plus years ago, using my father's loaned 270 Model 70. I hit him in the chest at an angle from behind and the bullet wrecked his offside shoulder and he went down. But that quick he was on his feet and going away at a good pace when my second shot at about two hundred yards spined him. This first shot was at < 70 yards and that made me come to respect elk as a tough customer. So now you're saying a 270 isn't enough gun either?
I was vacationing and shot a spike elk around Redlodge, thirty plus years ago, using my father's loaned 270 Model 70. I hit him in the chest at an angle from behind and the bullet wrecked his offside shoulder and he went down. But that quick he was on his feet and going away at a good pace when my second shot at about two hundred yards spined him. This first shot was at < 70 yards and that made me come to respect elk as a tough customer.
Quote from: BLRman on December 26, 2015, 06:49:40 PMQuote from: dontgetcrabs on December 26, 2015, 06:43:56 PMQuote from: JDHasty on December 26, 2015, 06:37:40 PMI was vacationing and shot a spike elk around Redlodge, thirty plus years ago, using my father's loaned 270 Model 70. I hit him in the chest at an angle from behind and the bullet wrecked his offside shoulder and he went down. But that quick he was on his feet and going away at a good pace when my second shot at about two hundred yards spined him. This first shot was at < 70 yards and that made me come to respect elk as a tough customer. So now you're saying a 270 isn't enough gun either? and since he made a poor shot with a bow, a 6.5 G is inadequate for large game.That elk was hit about 2/3 0f the way up and that is considered good shot placement and in most cases it would/should have been lights out for that elk, but like I said elk don't always do what you expect them to. I was standing there, like a big dummy, just waiting for it to die instead of running up and putting another arrow in it. When it got to it's feet and took off I was unprepared to shoot and stood there with my mouth agape. I saw the arrow go in and a spot of blood right where I was aiming before it tumbled over. I figure the hit in the rib tweeked the spine when it hit that rib and that is what tumbled it. Since that day an elk is not down for keeps until it is dead!
Quote from: JDHasty on December 26, 2015, 06:37:40 PMI was vacationing and shot a spike elk around Redlodge, thirty plus years ago, using my father's loaned 270 Model 70. I hit him in the chest at an angle from behind and the bullet wrecked his offside shoulder and he went down. But that quick he was on his feet and going away at a good pace when my second shot at about two hundred yards spined him. This first shot was at < 70 yards and that made me come to respect elk as a tough customer If I'm picturing this shot right it doesn't sound ideal
So why do you want to shoot a elk in the shoulder? It just makes a mess and loses meat. I never shoot elk there . I have shot elk with 8mm mag. 338 mags , 270, 270 wby, 30-378. .243 and 6.5 284. The only one that didn't take a step was with a 140 vld out of a 6.5 . I want a bullet that leaves all its energy in the animal . I will pick a very accurate gun over a powerful one every time . Again I'm sure there is plenty of AR rifles that shoot well enough to kill out past 800 yards . I have kill just a few elk with a bow ( 25 to 30 ) and will say any elk punched threw both lungs is done , you can get on the trail with zero wait and walk to your animal ... I have found that to be true 100 % of the time . One lung and or the liver not so much . Oh yeah wasn't this thread about AR s?
Quote from: Buckhunter24 on December 26, 2015, 07:02:04 PMQuote from: JDHasty on December 26, 2015, 06:37:40 PMI was vacationing and shot a spike elk around Redlodge, thirty plus years ago, using my father's loaned 270 Model 70. I hit him in the chest at an angle from behind and the bullet wrecked his offside shoulder and he went down. But that quick he was on his feet and going away at a good pace when my second shot at about two hundred yards spined him. This first shot was at < 70 yards and that made me come to respect elk as a tough customer If I'm picturing this shot right it doesn't sound idealBehind the ribs, quartering forward, into the off shoulder, after passing through the liver and a lung? It was maybe a tad bit far back, but not bad shot placement. I'll take it any day. It was a killing shot, the elk just did not know it. My second shot he was down hill from me on a flat and headed straight away and I had a lot of elk to shoot at and that shot took him dead center and that crashed him.
I would think, I may be going out on a limb here. that a .30 Cal 230gr OTM/VLD @ 2850 would totally juice a Elk shoulder at ranges waaaaaaaaaay out there.