One of Us
| The 300 gr bullet weights work well for pigs in the 45/70 even though I am partialo to the heavier stuff. |
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one of us
| It depends on what you are hunting in. If the area is relatively open the lighter bullets are the choice. If it is in really thick stuff ( which I prefer) then the heavier bullets are the answer. |
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One of Us
| Anyone have any experience with the Winchester 300 grain Partition Golds against large (200+ lb) boars? I've only used it once so far but the boar was small (~70 lbs). Thx. |
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Moderator
| 300 gr hornady hps and 350 rn... the 300 gr hp's aren't any tougher than the rem 405, and the 350 is a fine bullet..
just my 2 cents jeffe |
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one of us
| I kind of like those 350s myself. As a matter of fact, the brown truck just brought several thousand of them to the house today. Probaly a lifetime supply, but I hope not. |
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one of us
| My prefered caliber for boar. Bullets of 400 grs at 1800-2000 fps won`t dissapoint you. They usually kill quick or leave a good blood trail to follow. The Speer is a bit on the soft side, but if the 1" mushroom (>90% weight retention) does not exit, you don`t need to follow any longer that boar The Remingtons seem to be harder than the Speers, but I don`t use any longer the 300 grs class. They tumble in the body and I was not very satisfied with them on the bigger pigs. Had no opportunity to try the Noslers or the 350 grs Hornady flats. No good accuracy (3" at 110 yds!) with Barnes 300 XFN. Greetings Wolfgang |
| Posts: 33 | Location: Germany | Registered: 16 June 2002 |
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One of Us
| I agree totally with what woli has stated...the 300 gr are bullets I have moved away from due to being a little to expansive although everthing I have shot has died I prefer the bullet not to lose it's core..which the sierra 300 gr HPFN does. |
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