Free: Contests & Raffles.
Quote from: Bofire on August 28, 2010, 03:30:22 PM any of them, of those the 7mm would be my last choice, bears are not tough, anything that kills a deer will kill a bear.CarlI am very curious about this answer, why the 7mm would be the last choice? I have taken 4 bears with one, and 1 with a 7mm ultra mag. There are 3 others that should have dropped and didn't for me. I am in the process of getting one of my other guns suited up at the gunsmith right now. I have questioned my 7mm for a while now, that is why I am interested in your opinion.
any of them, of those the 7mm would be my last choice, bears are not tough, anything that kills a deer will kill a bear.Carl
:)Skier, Do not take me wrong a 7mm bullet in a number of cases will kill bears. I used a 7mm Mag for over 20 years, killed a lot of game with it, including bears.As I became more knowledgeable and critical, and as I shot the barrel clear out of that rifle, I had an opportunity to use a chrono a lot with a lot of rifles. I came to the conclusion that the 7mm rem mag is mostly noise and recoil, I know many disagree and I am fine with that. If the 280 was offered I would have no problem with it.Carl
I use a .270 and have done pretty good on bears with it (deer and elk too). Of those listed, I wouldn't like to see most people using the .243 or the .300. Bears are not particularly tough to kill, but many people are not familiar or accurate with their gear. The .243 is a bit light and a missplaced shot may not anchor it. On the opposite side are those folks that are "scared" of bears or over compensating for something and think the .300 is the ticket. I have met a few guys that think they will kill a bear "where ever it is hit" with the magnums.Shoot what your comfortable with, know your gear and you will be fine.
Bscman, I dont know if its even worth saying, but, if it was truly a 300yrd shot, the 270win would have worked just fine. Guess its all in what a guy feels comfortable with.
Quote from: billythekidrock on August 29, 2010, 05:35:20 AMI use a .270 and have done pretty good on bears with it (deer and elk too). Of those listed, I wouldn't like to see most people using the .243 or the .300. Bears are not particularly tough to kill, but many people are not familiar or accurate with their gear. The .243 is a bit light and a missplaced shot may not anchor it. On the opposite side are those folks that are "scared" of bears or over compensating for something and think the .300 is the ticket. I have met a few guys that think they will kill a bear "where ever it is hit" with the magnums.Shoot what your comfortable with, know your gear and you will be fine.What is it physically that you don't like about the 300wm or do you think the problem is mental?How much difference is there really between when a 30-06 hits a bear and a 300wm hits a bear...really...you're shooting the same bullet. Reality is that any of them will kill a bear dead and none will be any more deader than the other. If the chit hits the fan, then you could be shooting a howitzer, if you don't hit them right you're facing an ass-whooping. My friend shot a charging black bear in AK at a really short distance and killed it very dead before it opened up a can of whoopass on him. The fact of the matter is that the bullet hit the right place.shot placement.