roysclockgun
Handloader
- Dec 17, 2005
- 736
- 2
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I had previously reported on a 7mm 140gr. Nos. AB, retrieved from a boar, after crashing through the left side ribs and shattering the right shoulder and lodging in the armored frontal hide of the boar. That bullet retained 70% of it's original weight. The range was right at 90 yds.
On Sunday evening past, I harvested a doe for my daughter and her family.
The doe stepped into the sand track in SE Ga., at 86 yards. It was 5:30 P.M., so I knew I had to anchor her, as the foliage on either side of the track was waist to chest high. So, I wanted to break her shoulders. I had a near perfect side shot. The bullet did shatter her right shoulder, then having expanded and probably pushing bone on through, broke two ribs on the right side and another two ribs on the left side, before cutting the upper leg bone, on the left side, in half. I found the bullet under the hide on the left side and it is shown here.
The bullet weighed 47.4 gr. or 39.5% of it's original 120 gr.
My conclusion is that I need to find a bonded bullet in 120 gr. as on a bigger animal at longer range, the 120 may not get the job done, given the same shot presented.
Both bullets were chronied 10 ft. from the muzzle at around 3150 fps.
What do you think/
Steven L. Ashe
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I had previously reported on a 7mm 140gr. Nos. AB, retrieved from a boar, after crashing through the left side ribs and shattering the right shoulder and lodging in the armored frontal hide of the boar. That bullet retained 70% of it's original weight. The range was right at 90 yds.
On Sunday evening past, I harvested a doe for my daughter and her family.
The doe stepped into the sand track in SE Ga., at 86 yards. It was 5:30 P.M., so I knew I had to anchor her, as the foliage on either side of the track was waist to chest high. So, I wanted to break her shoulders. I had a near perfect side shot. The bullet did shatter her right shoulder, then having expanded and probably pushing bone on through, broke two ribs on the right side and another two ribs on the left side, before cutting the upper leg bone, on the left side, in half. I found the bullet under the hide on the left side and it is shown here.
The bullet weighed 47.4 gr. or 39.5% of it's original 120 gr.
My conclusion is that I need to find a bonded bullet in 120 gr. as on a bigger animal at longer range, the 120 may not get the job done, given the same shot presented.
Both bullets were chronied 10 ft. from the muzzle at around 3150 fps.
What do you think/
Steven L. Ashe
