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Quote from: brew on December 05, 2024, 05:45:01 PM7 mag with 160 gr partitions My brother shot this for over 20 years until he shot the barrel out of his Browning A bolt, then switched to Win model 70 in 300 WinMag.
7 mag with 160 gr partitions
Quote from: MHWASH on December 06, 2024, 06:18:51 AMWe have decided that the softer bullets are more efficient killers. usually rolling the bears right where they sand. We've had the hardest time finding the ones with the ABs. They do leave a good blood trail, but usually not for 75-100 yards. I know it's a small sample size, but the CM and 7-08 kills were more impressive than the larger calibers too.Interesting, did you tend to get pass throughs with the softer bullets, or just one hole and all energy dumped in the animal?
We have decided that the softer bullets are more efficient killers. usually rolling the bears right where they sand. We've had the hardest time finding the ones with the ABs. They do leave a good blood trail, but usually not for 75-100 yards. I know it's a small sample size, but the CM and 7-08 kills were more impressive than the larger calibers too.
Bears can be tough to anchor and the fur soaks up blood making tracking a little tricky. I like using heavy for caliber fragmenting bullets that do a lot of internal damage and put them through the shoulders to incapacitate movement.
Quote from: CaNINE on December 09, 2024, 06:50:08 PMBears can be tough to anchor and the fur soaks up blood making tracking a little tricky. I like using heavy for caliber fragmenting bullets that do a lot of internal damage and put them through the shoulders to incapacitate movement. you should not be hitting shoulders on a broadside bear lungs and heart are not in the same position as a deer or elk.
Quote from: huntnnw on December 09, 2024, 09:37:23 PMQuote from: CaNINE on December 09, 2024, 06:50:08 PMBears can be tough to anchor and the fur soaks up blood making tracking a little tricky. I like using heavy for caliber fragmenting bullets that do a lot of internal damage and put them through the shoulders to incapacitate movement. you should not be hitting shoulders on a broadside bear lungs and heart are not in the same position as a deer or elk. Unless, as caNINE stated, you want to incapacitate them on the spot. In the thick and steep, a “dead” bear can disappear very quickly!