Free: Contests & Raffles.
Chasing Mr. bull and looking for comments whether to shot 195 or 225 in my knight. Plan on not reaching out beyond 100 yds. Also looking for broad side not necessarily a frontal shot. Not being picky and will shot a first legal bull that's within range. Good luck to all and aim small for this season.
Sabot,This is timely as I look for my Elk load for my .52cal. At the range .458 Hornady 350gr round nose Interbond group well at 100yd (3MOA ish with my peep) I was considering using them but am not sure of the expansion I'll get at the terminal velocity. I have Bloodline 300 and 275 gr that I have used in my Disk 50 cal to take deer and elk. But I was looking at the KE of the Bloodlines down range and it pretty light (knight recommended loads). Does the structure of the bullet make up for the lower KE. I always lived by the close to 1,500 ftlb at the target, pretty much can't get there with the Bloodlines.
The Red Hot 375's also shoot well but Knight is smoking crack at $38 for 18, plus their shipping charges. If they wanted .52 to sell just make it a little more reasonable. I haven't been able to find this bullet or something close direct from Barnes, guessing it's an expander or something in the 45/70 line.
I know I am stuck with the Knight sabot and either a .458 or .475 now, unless I go to full conicals. I have some concials but the way they load after the crown I don't feel like I get a good gas seal. I am new to conicals so I don't know how they should feel loading?
To the OP be picky on your shot so you don't lose an animal, get a good load with a heavier bullet.
I'd shoot the bigger bullets and I wouldn't jump to more powder without shooting it first. I'd also suggest trying loose powder. Work up a load that shoots best in your rifle. I think there are a lot of folks that shoot ~100 grains of loose powder for that reason. It gives you the ability to fine tune your load and it burns a lot more efficiently than pellets.195 grain bullets out of a muzzleloader seem awful light, especially for elk.