TXbaldhunter
Handloader
- May 12, 2007
- 406
- 339
I killed this Red Stag with a 308 Norma Magnum using a 180gr AccuBond.I guess you could say this was a good test for the AccuBond and shows the importance of using a stout bullet when shooting larger elk type game animals.Hitting heavy bones can happen and really do a number on a bullet.I shot the stag at 185yds.Mv was around 3050fps and at 185yds,the impact velocity would have been a little over 2800fps.The bullet hit the onside shoulder right in the big joint below the scapula,traveled through the heart and tried to exit behind the offside shoulder but the thick hide held it back.He went about a 100yds before going down and not one drop of blood was found.If the bullet would have exited,I'm sure there would have been blood everywhere.The recovered bullet weighed 89.4grs,so the retained weight was 49.6%.The meat loss was a little less than what I expected at 2lbs.Mostly due to the bone shrapnel around the wound channel in the onside shoulder.A mono bullet probably would have held up better on the bone,but a lighter jacketed bullet may have blown up right there in the shoulder and may have failed to enter the chest cavity.Bob Hagel once wrote a few words that should be engraved in the mind of every big-game hunter. He stated, “You should not use a cartridge that does the job when everything goes right; you need one that works when everything goes wrong.”