Free: Contests & Raffles.
Or the bullet did not hit the bear first.
Would a poorly placed 212 grain ELD-X out of a 300 win mag.....that took off a softball patch of flesh leave an exit wound?? Ballistics and conventional knowledge would say there isn't a bear in Washington that could stop a 212 grain ELD-X from full penetration with exit wound. I've got pics of both side of the bear a year later and no exit wound exists.....so either it dynamited on the onside shoulder or it fragged the inside of the bears shoulder not killing it. The later is a definite possibility....but that would also suggest complete failure of an ELD-X....which clearly cannot be the case. In hindsight, I would have not taken a shoulder shot using this frangible bullet. I too subscribed to the rhetoric that a 212 grain bullet out of a 300 win mag would wo to stern any big game animal in North America....I was wrong. I'll have to ponder other possibilities of how this bear didn't die with such a great bullet.
Rocks are great for ricochets/shrapnel.
Fortunately the bear is still very much alive. I am always on the lookout for it in hopes of crossing paths again, it is a beautiful bear.
Quote from: jrebel on August 27, 2024, 09:07:32 AMFortunately the bear is still very much alive. I am always on the lookout for it in hopes of crossing paths again, it is a beautiful bear. That would be really cool if you closed the deal with him one of these days. Not only for redemption, but to be able to examine him up close and hopefully get a better idea of what happened with that shot with the ELD-X.if you shot him this year, what do you think you'd be using?
103gr eld-x recovered from mule deer. Shot from a 6 arc. All recovered bullets have had core separation. All shots were over 250 yds. Broadside shots, no heavy bone.