The biggest challenge for the 243 will be on the pigs. If you hunt small to medium pigs and sows, the 243 will do great. If you hunt the big boars with their heavy grissel shield and expect to bust a shoulder and still get full penetration your asking alot from a little guy.
Best bullet I feel for heavy pigs would be the 100 gr partition. I would try to stay away from the shoulders of any boar that over 300 pounds with the 243. Slip one behind the front leg and he won't go far at all.
For all the other game you mentioned, I feel any of the conventional bullets from speer, sierra, nosler and hornady in weights from 85 to 100 gr would work great on these lighter targets.
Hope this helps!!!
Good Hunting!!
50
I found that the Barnes X bullets penetrate further than Partitions of the same weight and retain all of their weight except for the lot of defective ones that I tested seven years ago. But the X bullets don't open up as much as say a Corelokt or even a partition.
If you find that the X bullets don't foul your bore and the petals don't break off then they have far more ablity to penetrate in my observation. This would go for other similar bullets such as the GS bullets I expect.
I am not using X bullets as I use big bullets for the game I hunt.
Game animals have four good legs, and the loss of the use just one of them, especially a front one, doesn't slow them appreciable in their retreat (or charge, for that matter). I've seen whitetails run rapidly for hundreds of yard with shoulders that were not just broken, but actually "dangling" and virtually detached from the body.
What is important is not the shoulder itself, but the vital organs which may, depending on the angle of the shot, lie directly behind the shoulder. If you need to go through the shoulder to get to the heart or lungs, then breaking or disabling the shoulder is simply a dividend of properly shooting into the vitals. If, on the other hand, the game is quartering away in such manner that a shot to the vitals will miss both the near and far shoulders, then shoot for the vitals; even though the shoulder is not hit, the animal will likely be recovered a similar distance from where it was shot.
Damaging the shoulder is insignificant in terms of stopping game compared to adequately traumatising the heart or lungs.
Perfect.
Barnes do a 115gr RN original that according to shihlen should stabilise in a standard 243 barrel - now that starts to elevate the 6mm to the revered 256mannlicher levels of SD!
As for the hit them in the shoulder shot's, I've found that my .270 with a 150gr Nosler, can Easily disintigrate both shoulders!
I have a good exemple for an EU caliber.
6.5X68 a 120 gr bullet at 3182 fps. We can call this caliber "Small Magnum Caliber".
Suitable to take big animals but not too big
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