- Oct 30, 2004
- 24,222
- 2,895
Got this from another site. Thought I would post it here.
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I just got back from the trip.
We were in the Northern Peninsula of NFLD in the high ground. Very open country with small patches of dense black spruce here and there.
All week it looked like shots would be at least 200 yards, if not more.
We ended up spotting a bull about 2000 yards away at the base of a high knob. We circled around and came out on the knob above him and he was still there. The shot was about 30 yards.
First shot was behind the shoulder. The bullet passed through the heart and was recovered under the skin of the meaty part of the upper leg on the far side. The bullet had exited the body and reentered the upper leg and not made it out of the hide on the far side. The Jacket was well peeled back but the jacket and core were still attached to each other in a mushroom. The bullet has lost some weight but I'm impressed that it stayed together. I haven't weighed it yet.
Second shot was into the shoulder which broke the shoulder and upper leg bone. That bullet was not found.
I'd say that 30 yards at 3500+fps on a Moose is an extreme test for any bullet and I'd say the 165 AccuBond passed.
The Moose was dead on the first shot but was still moving, thus the second shot.
The Bull was a nice sized 14 pointer.
I won't hesitate to use 165 Accubonds in my 300 RUM in the future but I will also be developing loads with heavier bullets.
This is only the second animal that I shot with 165 Accubonds. Both were close and at very high velocity. In both cases the bullets held together and did not blow up. I highly recommend these bullets.
Some pics: The moose is the hairy one....
The recovered bullet weighs 103.2 grains, which is a retained weight of 62.5%.
That is good for a 30 yard shot at over 3,500 fps MV.
I'll post a photo of the bullet soon.
Here are some photos of the bullet that did the deed.
Retained weight is 103.2 grains or 62.5%.
Note how well the core has stayed bonded to the jacket.