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Bull or Cow?Silvies in the unit I drew.
The elk I have shot with the .270 were all with 140 accubonds which performed great. Closest was under 50yds and furthest was 350yds.270? Don't those bounce off the hide on elk?
On a serious note, I might hedge my bet with a premium bullet like a partition or the like, but the cartridge is plenty capable, & a pleasure to shoot.
My dad used a Remington 725 in .270 for about 20 years before he bought his .30-30.I drew an elk tag this year for eastern Oregon. I'm new to hunting as I haven't shot >deer sized animal in honestly 20yrs. Obviously I'm not a hunting specialist or even shooting specialist, so I'd love to hear your thoughts.
I'm drawn towards a .270 as a rifle I could use for multiple hunts. I realize this maybe marginal for elk hunts but more than enough for deer. My budget style says choose one gun for both elk and deer. I realize there are many options (almost endless) so I'd only like to hear why the .270 is a poor choice (30-06 was the runner up.)
Thank you in advance.
You can state your obvious love for the .270, without berating another's post.The .270 Win beats the 7mm-08 in every metric. The rifle itself may weigh fractionally more, but the extra bit of performance is worth those couple of ounces.
Sorry you took it that way. I was merely stating a fact.You can state your obvious love for the .270, without berating another's post.
Bad form Blackdog, bad form.![]()
Well stated, with a reference to researchable data that buttress the opinion. Absent any derogatory reference to the competing cartridge or its (occasionally sensitive) supporters.The .270 Win beats the 7mm-08 in every metric. The rifle itself may weigh fractionally more, but the extra bit of performance is worth those couple of ounces.
By quoting it.Sorry you took it that way. I was merely stating a fact.
And please tell me how the hell I berated your post?
I did not quote it. I mentioned the 7mm-08, but did not quote it.By quoting it.
You could've stated your viewpoint without quoting anyone.
I did not quote it. I mentioned the 7mm-08, but did not quote it.
Here in Europe and Scandinavia the 6.5x55 Swedish has been dropping our Elg - like a moose, but bigger - in their hoof-prints since late 1895.270 and 30-06 are both great deer/elk cartridges. An added benefit is they are boring, been around cartridges, that get over looked by new fads. Used rifles in those cartridges tend to sell for cheaper.
30-06 would be my first choice. It has more options than 270 in rifles, ammunition and bullet selection.
tac ,For Andy - why are my photos degraded when I put them in the post? They start off looking good and sharp, then, they go the way you see them above.
Maybe its just your eyes, it's not fuzzy to me. Eat more carrots, lol!Here in Europe and Scandinavia the 6.5x55 Swedish has been dropping our Elg - like a moose, but bigger - in their hoof-prints since late 1895.
There are some real whizzo modern bullets from the likes of Hirtenberger, RWS, Norma and sister Lapua that are sure-fire DRT pills for these large beasts.
Even the 7x57 Mauser with modern bullets seems to manage to take the meat home, and seems to have forgotten how 'outdated' it is.
Tell that to my old pal, Gregory V, a young award-winning ghillie of the year back when, and now and now senior groundman for a 35,000 acre estate up in Scotland. He still shoots his father's Rigby in .275 Rigby - the rather coy title of the 7x57 Mauser after WW1 made anything German a mite unpopular. Open hillsides mean stalking of a kind that has America sportsmen coming back year after year for the thrill of the crawl.
My own 1912-built 7.5x57 Mauser was used as a meat-getter in Rhodesia from 1913 to 1990. Everything from Kudu to Eland with the same 140gr RNSP.
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