Colorado. 1st rifle. Mid OctoberWhere are you hunting? State and terrain.
Time of year? I voted 30-06 - that 150gr raptor will be perfect from 40 up to 400 yards.
Thanks for feedback.My wife and I (along with another buddy) are hunting elk in Idaho this year.. another pair of buddies (Idaho residents and avid (and typically very successful) elk hunters) are assisting us on the DIY hunt..
Both residents have been pretty adamant that they dont hunt elk in their area with anything less than a 30 magnum of some sort..
Its not that something smaller wont kill them.. they freely admit that lots and lots of elk fall every year to 270's and other typical "deer" cartridges... but for them, they find 300's bring a balance of both caliber and range that things like 308, 30-06, 270, 6.5 cm, etc. dont possess..
As such.. my wife and I are both taking our 300 H&H's.. and our third buddy is bringing a 300 WM..
the two "guides" shoot a 300 WM and a 300 PRC respectively..
Mine and my wifes guns are loaded with 180gr TSX that travel at roughly 2900 fps (hand loads) out of both of our guns..
300 WM. 180 grain Barnes TTSX
All my barrels are 20.5” and same 19mm contour. So all four choices weigh the same (maybe and ounce or two difference with different scopes I have on each)180 grain factory TTSX smashed through this bulls heart. Would be a good choice but not one of his options he has.
I wouldn’t want to lug around a Lapua while elk hunting. Notice terrain in background.
30-06 with a mono bullet he listed will be perfect.
A 375 Ruger, or H&H, shooting a 175 gr bullet just doesn’t sound right. Sectional density and BC can’t be very good. Minimum weight that I have used is the 250 GMX. They shot several inches high compared to my 300 gr Swift A Frame .
In the old days I used 180 gr cup and core 30-06 to take more than a dozen elk. Modern bullets I would consider 165 gr but 150 gr is way too light, especially if hunting heavy cover. I think a blade of grass could knock one of those significantly off track.