stevienicknacks 2 Posted May 7, 2010 Report Share Posted May 7, 2010 To put this into perspective I have shot a few foxes with my .17 HMR with my best shot taking one right between the eyes at 150 yards (no wind obviously). Obviously .17 HMR is not ideal for fox adn should never be used for body shots and in most areas the FAO recommned that .17HMR should not be used. My point is that if you can kill a fox with a .17HMR imagine the capability of a bigger round. I have now bought a 22.250 for fox for 2 reasons. 1. Much less impact from wind, 2. Body shots 3. FAO are ok with it Quote Link to post
black lab 3 Posted May 7, 2010 Report Share Posted May 7, 2010 Hi, I use my .270 for all my shooting now from Red's to Magpie's, - Red's & Roe's 130 gr sp and Foxes & vermin 110gr Balistic Tip's homeload's ATB Wullie. Quote Link to post
stevienicknacks 2 Posted May 8, 2010 Report Share Posted May 8, 2010 Hi, I use my .270 for all my shooting now from Red's to Magpie's, - Red's & Roe's 130 gr sp and Foxes & vermin 110gr Balistic Tip's homeload's ATB Wullie. 110gr on a fox....would ;like to see that, wouldnt be much left of it!!! I shot a bunny yesterday with a 50grain Remington accutip at yards...not much left of it. Quote Link to post
THE POACHER 13 Posted May 8, 2010 Report Share Posted May 8, 2010 i do alot of fox shooting and i think the ideal gun is a 223 when it hits them they know all about it Quote Link to post
irishnut 297 Posted May 8, 2010 Report Share Posted May 8, 2010 i'd go for the .243 mate, i shoot a .222 for fox only, its expensive to feed, and also no good for deer, the 243 is great for everything from fox to nags not running fast enough at the curragh Quote Link to post
jay222 0 Posted May 12, 2010 Report Share Posted May 12, 2010 243 is the thes to pick if you want a all round gun. if it is just for foxing tho i would go with the 22/250 For foxing I like my 22-250 a very flat trajectory not so loopy as a .243 and you can use it on Roe deer in Scotland (subject to certain ballstic requirements). But I have to admit that .243 is probablly more suited as an all-round calibre. a .243 with 55gr is flatter than a .22-250 with 55gr Quote Link to post
Treacle Trackpad 6 Posted May 13, 2010 Report Share Posted May 13, 2010 i'd go for the .243 mate, i shoot a .222 for fox only, its expensive to feed, and also no good for deer, the 243 is great for everything from fox to nags not running fast enough at the curragh I estimate my .222 to cost me no more than 36p per pop (reloads). Not too expensive. Not sure about factory rds as I have never used them, but I hear PRVI ammo is cheap as chips in this cal. Quote Link to post
black lab 3 Posted May 13, 2010 Report Share Posted May 13, 2010 Hi, I use my .270 for all my shooting now from Red's to Magpie's, - Red's & Roe's 130 gr sp and Foxes & vermin 110gr Balistic Tip's homeload's ATB Wullie. 110gr on a fox....would ;like to see that, wouldnt be much left of it!!! I shot a bunny yesterday with a 50grain Remington accutip at yards...not much left of it. You would think it had swallowed a GRENADE Quote Link to post
matt_hooks 188 Posted May 14, 2010 Report Share Posted May 14, 2010 Is a .270 "too much" for a fox? Well, no, if you hit it with the .270 it will kill it. You can only kill something and there's no such thing as "overkill". However, the .270 will tend to go through, so you need to be extra careful about your back stop (though of course you should do that anyway whatever you're shooting) The main drawback with the .270 is not at the receiving end, but at the firers end. It is a powerful round, and so gives you a pretty good shove in the shoulder. If you're used to airguns then the kick from the .270 might be a bit offputting to start with, and you would have to make sure you mount properly otherwise it could hurt! I would go the .243 route. It's a great fast, flat shooting round that will knock down anything you're likely to find in the UK (except boar) safely and reliably as long as you put the rounds in the right place. It's reasonably inexpensive and most manufacturers chamber a rifle for it, so the choice is wide, and the FEO is more likely to look kindly on it as a first rifle and mainly for foxes. My advice would be to try and get your hands on as many different calibres as you can and see which suits you for recoil, weight of rifle for carrying and cost. Quote Link to post
jamie g 17 Posted May 14, 2010 Report Share Posted May 14, 2010 just remember inless your going for deer to. alot of forces wont let you have 243 just for fox. they will want you to have deer on the land. before they grant you a 243 Quote Link to post
Deker 3,478 Posted May 14, 2010 Report Share Posted May 14, 2010 just remember inless your going for deer to. alot of forces wont let you have 243 just for fox. they will want you to have deer on the land. before they grant you a 243 You are of course quite correct, even though the Home Office guide makes it quite clear the .243 is acceptable as a stand alone fox tool! Quote Link to post
jamie g 17 Posted May 15, 2010 Report Share Posted May 15, 2010 just remember inless your going for deer to. alot of forces wont let you have 243 just for fox. they will want you to have deer on the land. before they grant you a 243 You are of course quite correct, even though the Home Office guide makes it quite clear the .243 is acceptable as a stand alone fox tool! silly really isnt it. 243 is the all rounder really. Quote Link to post
sharp_shooter_sam 0 Posted June 20, 2010 Report Share Posted June 20, 2010 (edited) A .270 is few people first choice fox calibre! As is 6.5x55 swede. Lots of choice out there, and everyone you ask will give you a different opinion. I like the .243 because they are versatile, but when I get a deer calibre, it will be the humble swede as it is just too much for fox alone Edited June 20, 2010 by sharp_shooter_sam Quote Link to post
jamie g 17 Posted June 21, 2010 Report Share Posted June 21, 2010 243 is the thes to pick if you want a all round gun. if it is just for foxing tho i would go with the 22/250 For foxing I like my 22-250 a very flat trajectory not so loopy as a .243 and you can use it on Roe deer in Scotland (subject to certain ballstic requirements). But I have to admit that .243 is probablly more suited as an all-round calibre. a .243 with 55gr is flatter than a .22-250 with 55gr yes your right mate. but imo its wasted firing a 55 grain round form a 243. surely if you want a 243 then the choice of heavier bullets would be better. otherwise your not ghaining anything over a 22 cf. dont forget a 243 uses alot more powder then a 222 or 223 and if most foxing is done up to 250 yards the 22 cf is the best for the job if you want to keep cost down Quote Link to post
cassshantia 16 Posted June 21, 2010 Report Share Posted June 21, 2010 ive had the same question asked when i went in for my ticket , i purchased a howa 1500 .243 and got some 90 gr sako game heads and when i finally set my sights to 100m i shot a 1"group then i set a target @50 m and @150m and shot @ both targets and there was only a 1.5"difference between all 3 targets so its very flat and very accurate Quote Link to post
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