Mr_Logic 5 Posted May 11, 2008 Report Share Posted May 11, 2008 I have a 243 which is down for fox and deer. It does both very well, but the trouble is that I need to use the 58gr Vmax for fox, because of expansion, and 85gr HP for deer, so that is doesn't expand so much. In order for the rifle to be truly multi-purpose, I need ammo that doesn't make a mess of a deer but makes enough of a mess on foxy. Anybody got any ideas if such a beast exists? Quote Link to post
FJager 0 Posted May 11, 2008 Report Share Posted May 11, 2008 Head shoot the deer. Quote Link to post
sounder 9 Posted May 11, 2008 Report Share Posted May 11, 2008 I have a 243 which is down for fox and deer. It does both very well, but the trouble is that I need to use the 58gr Vmax for fox, because of expansion, and 85gr HP for deer, so that is doesn't expand so much. In order for the rifle to be truly multi-purpose, I need ammo that doesn't make a mess of a deer but makes enough of a mess on foxy. Anybody got any ideas if such a beast exists? i use 100g feds for deer and fox Quote Link to post
v-max 2 Posted May 11, 2008 Report Share Posted May 11, 2008 your 85g HP will do the job a fox dont care what he shot with i think or they havent with me. Quote Link to post
SNAP SHOT 194 Posted May 11, 2008 Report Share Posted May 11, 2008 hornady 95grain SST with do the job on both deer and fox, As said in the above post it will not care what it is shot with................ Quote Link to post
fastrac10 0 Posted May 11, 2008 Report Share Posted May 11, 2008 (edited) As said above, really don't think it matters if it makes a mess of Mr fox. I use Sako gamehead 90grain for both. Very good and cheap at £15.91 for 20 Cheers Fastrac10 Edited May 11, 2008 by fastrac10 Quote Link to post
Mr_Logic 5 Posted May 11, 2008 Author Report Share Posted May 11, 2008 I am just keen to make sure that the bullet doesn't just whiz through the fox without causing lethal damage. (obviously I'm aiming for the right bit, and most of the time I will hit it, but not always...) I will probably stick with the 85gr HPs then, although gotta be said I would like something cheaper! Quote Link to post
IanB 0 Posted May 12, 2008 Report Share Posted May 12, 2008 I use 58gr vmax for fox and roe deer, does both jobs very well and to be honest when shooting chest shots on the deer, they do very little damage to be honest... I wouldn't use anything else now.. Quote Link to post
Mr_Logic 5 Posted May 12, 2008 Author Report Share Posted May 12, 2008 I use 58gr vmax for fox and roe deer, does both jobs very well and to be honest when shooting chest shots on the deer, they do very little damage to be honest... I wouldn't use anything else now.. I dropped a roe the other week with the 58gr, and it made a hell of mess of the chest area... I wonder if we are just seeing the same thing from different viewpoints? Quote Link to post
dicehorn 38 Posted May 13, 2008 Report Share Posted May 13, 2008 I use 58gr vmax for fox and roe deer, does both jobs very well and to be honest when shooting chest shots on the deer, they do very little damage to be honest... I wouldn't use anything else now.. I dropped a roe the other week with the 58gr, and it made a hell of mess of the chest area... I wonder if we are just seeing the same thing from different viewpoints? I do not have a .243 preferring to use a 6.5 for deer. The problem with using a smaller weight of bullet in the .243 is the very high terminal velocity, and sooner of later the perfect entry will cause massive tissue damage as I have seen on deer shot by clients. My advise is to keep it simple - use one weight of bullet for both fox and deer using the heaviest bullet that the twist in your rifle will permit. We seem to concentrate on Hornaday and Noslers - have you thought about Berger bullets? Peter Quote Link to post
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