Guy Miner
Master Loader
- Apr 6, 2006
- 17,746
- 5,817
Coming from a comment in the Rifle section, and I've heard it many times over the years, how important is "bullet selection" to you?
Long ago I was really impressed with the idea of having a huge array of bullets from which to choose. As I've gotten older, I realize more and more that I want only one or two good bullets for each of my rifles.
When I was young and always used the same rifle for both varmints & big game, I'd have two loads; a varmint bullet and a deer bullet. Sometimes the deer fell to a varmint bullet, and that actually worked out fine too. A little messy, but fine.
These days I've easily settled into being very happy with one or two bullets for a particular rifle. And I'm not sure that swapping bullets is going to make one rifle do a lot better... For instance, with the .25-06, often discussed as not having much of a bullet selection... I say it's got the bullets needed, so who cares?
Basically its a pronghorn, deer & coyote cartridge, capable of instant death out to a quarter mile or so, easily.
That can be done with a 100 gr bullet, a 110, a 115, a 117 or a 120. They're all going to accomplish that. I've taken mule deer with 100 gr bullets and two different 115's. They all dropped dead just fine, near or far. I don't see where having a dozen more bullets to choose from would have helped at all.
Would a longer-range, high BC bullet be welcome? Of course! Particularly if it stabilizes well in a standard 1:10 twist barrel.
Ever really look at all the bullets in say .30 cal? Good grief! Couldn't we do it all with a good 165 or 180 and never need the rest? Seriously, what in North America couldn't be dealt with, using a 180 gr Nosler Partition? A little light on big Alaskan Brown Bear? Fine, it's a .30-06, I'll use a bigger rifle if I'm feeling the 180 Partition is a little light.
And how realistic is that anyway? I'm not going brown bear hunting anytime soon. Maybe never in my lifetime. Most of us won't.
I dunno guys, am not convinced that a big selection of bullets is anywhere near as important as having the Right Bullets available.
Guy
Long ago I was really impressed with the idea of having a huge array of bullets from which to choose. As I've gotten older, I realize more and more that I want only one or two good bullets for each of my rifles.
When I was young and always used the same rifle for both varmints & big game, I'd have two loads; a varmint bullet and a deer bullet. Sometimes the deer fell to a varmint bullet, and that actually worked out fine too. A little messy, but fine.
These days I've easily settled into being very happy with one or two bullets for a particular rifle. And I'm not sure that swapping bullets is going to make one rifle do a lot better... For instance, with the .25-06, often discussed as not having much of a bullet selection... I say it's got the bullets needed, so who cares?
Basically its a pronghorn, deer & coyote cartridge, capable of instant death out to a quarter mile or so, easily.
That can be done with a 100 gr bullet, a 110, a 115, a 117 or a 120. They're all going to accomplish that. I've taken mule deer with 100 gr bullets and two different 115's. They all dropped dead just fine, near or far. I don't see where having a dozen more bullets to choose from would have helped at all.
Would a longer-range, high BC bullet be welcome? Of course! Particularly if it stabilizes well in a standard 1:10 twist barrel.
Ever really look at all the bullets in say .30 cal? Good grief! Couldn't we do it all with a good 165 or 180 and never need the rest? Seriously, what in North America couldn't be dealt with, using a 180 gr Nosler Partition? A little light on big Alaskan Brown Bear? Fine, it's a .30-06, I'll use a bigger rifle if I'm feeling the 180 Partition is a little light.
And how realistic is that anyway? I'm not going brown bear hunting anytime soon. Maybe never in my lifetime. Most of us won't.
I dunno guys, am not convinced that a big selection of bullets is anywhere near as important as having the Right Bullets available.
Guy