The Accurate Reloading Forums
What caliber

This topic can be found at:
https://forums.accuratereloading.com/eve/forums/a/tpc/f/6711043/m/438108155

11 October 2006, 05:29
ChuckF
What caliber
My brother has a health problem and can only shoot a low recoiling rifle. Where he hunts he says there is small white tail deer and the range is 75 to 100 yards. What caliber would you recommend? Thanks. Chuck
11 October 2006, 05:41
vapodog
If he is careful with his shots either the .223 or 22-250 will do the trick properly handloaded.

If he wants a bit more the .243 Win has been killing deer for a very long time with very low recoil.


///////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
"Socialism is a philosophy of failure, the creed of ignorance, and the gospel of envy, its inherent virtue is the equal sharing of misery."
Winston Churchill
11 October 2006, 05:44
Grumulkin
The low recoiling guns I've taken deer with are:

1. A 222 Remington with one shot between 80 and 100 yds.

2. A 22-250 Remington. One of the deer I took with this one with a single shot was at a GPS measured 360 yards (a bang flop with with the bullet going in one lung and out the other). This cartridge is quite a bit more powerful than the 222 Remington but I still consider it to have very low recoil.

Guns like the 243 Winchester, 7mm/08 Remington, 6mm Remington, etc. have more power and recoil but I wouldn't consider them heavy recoilers. The addition of a muzzel brake to one of them would probably bring the recoil down to the level of an unbraked 22/250. There are many more that are of similar recoil and suitable for deer.
11 October 2006, 07:41
Jay Johnson
I would suggest the .243 or the .257 Robests.

Recoil Table.
11 October 2006, 11:16
cewe
The 6.5x55 is nice to shoot, my kids have been using one since they were around 10yo.


http://www.tgsafari.co.za

"What doesn´t kill you makes you stranger!"
11 October 2006, 13:13
Paul from nz
make sure you get a decent recoil pad on it too! and dont get a rifle too light.
11 October 2006, 14:43
hvy barrel
243 Win, 6mm Rem, 250 Sav any of these should work well for the mentioned purpose.
11 October 2006, 16:55
steve4102
From 75 to 100 yards a CZ 527 in 7.62x39 would do very nicely.

http://www.cz-usa.com/product_detail.php?id=15
11 October 2006, 17:23
30378
The 22/250 loaded with the 52gr Barnes Triple Shock or 55gr Bonded Bear Claw bullet is a deer killing machine.


Free men should not be subjected to permits, paperwork and taxation in order to carry any firearm. NRA Benefactor
12 October 2006, 02:39
gabe
how bout a vote for a 30-30 and I have whacked my share with a 243 as well

gabe


It's better to have it and not need it than need it and not have it!
12 October 2006, 03:38
Bryan Chick
When I was growing up in West Texas I used my Grandads model 94 in 30/30 and it hurt me more than my 375 does today. The 243 has very low recoil energy in my experience
12 October 2006, 04:00
gabe
True that, the lever 30-30s can be a little rough, most of my 30-30 shooting has been with an old savage 340 bolt gun and recoil with it has never seemed that bad, however recoil is sort of a relative thing too.


It's better to have it and not need it than need it and not have it!
12 October 2006, 04:37
Whelen35
One year I had a injury and had to do the same thing. What I ended up with was a TC contender carbine and a 7mm TCU 21 inch barrel. When loaded up with 120-130gr bullets like the great hornady 120gr handgun bullet or the nosler 120gr BT it works better than it should. With this rig you can see the hit on deer through the scope very mild. I now have the carbine a 10 inch gun set up and a 14 inch gun all set up for hunting or plinking. All have taken deer, and never was a second shot needed, or was the trail long, it just works.


In North Dakota, winter sucks
13 October 2006, 00:17
nordrseta
There are bunch of obvious choices, but from personal experience: Remington's Managed Recoil ammunition make a 30'06 kick about like a 243. My son used a 243 with a 100 gr Partition loaded to only 2750 fps to take two nice whitetails during his first season last year. A 223 loaded with a 64 gr Winchester Powerpoint does the trick too. Took a whitetail with a single .429 SWC @ 875 fps a couple seasons back; I was using a pistol but a carbine loaded that light would scarcely kick at all.
13 October 2006, 18:21
AaroninUtah
When a muzzle break is thrown in the mix, you expand the possibilities.

Premium bullets also make what used to be too small calibers useful on deer. Partitions and Barnes TSX in 22 cal is effective at moderate ranges.

This year my young girls will be shooting my Rock River Arms AR-15 with a muzzle break. The recoil is about on par with a 22LR. It shoots both Barnes TSX and Partitions under an inch. The collapsable stock makes stock fit a non-issue.

Aaron
13 October 2006, 18:26
richj
My buddy's got a pacemaker and had a bypass but he still likes to hunt so he's got a Rem M7 in 7mm08 with a recoil reducer and a muzzle brake. He loves it.

Rich
13 October 2006, 19:17
jro45
The 22-250 shooting those 70gr bullets doesn't kick much.