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forger
04-25-2010, 10:06 PM
If so, what bullet and how effective is it ?

eagleye
04-25-2010, 10:17 PM
I have shot quite a few deer with a 223. Only one gave trouble, it died but had run pretty far, recovered it with the help of my trusty shepherd. I had hit him a little low, just over the sternum. Otherwise, no problem. I used 55 grain ballistic tips at max loads. I would however limit myself to cross rib shots, nothing through heavy bone and short range only. The high speed and fragmenting bullet results in massive lung damage, my recollection is there was usually no exit wound but just bloody pulp were the lungs had been. But I prefer heavy bullets at moderate speed.

Pete

BrentWin
04-27-2010, 03:27 PM
Why me lord
What have I ever done
To have to listen to another one
Of the arguments again

Kris Kristopherson sorta

Uncle Jack
04-27-2010, 03:30 PM
In the words of Nancy Reagan:

"Just say NO."

uj

borg
04-27-2010, 03:42 PM
As long as we are on the topic, have any of you trolled a hunting/shooting website lately by posting questions about game hunting with a .224 caliber centerfire? Isn't it funny how no one ever points out that you could have just used the search function to locate the numerous debates available on this topic?

Now, if you will excuse me, I just barely escaped with my life from a charging bull PD and I need to go get my rest. I have to catch a flight to Africa tomorrow morning where I will hunt cape buffalo with my HM2. I hope to stop in Zimbabwe on my way home where I will disco with smoked turkeys and try to hook up with a woman named Toads.

forger
04-28-2010, 10:56 PM
No need for argument or debate, I simply asked if anyone here has used a .223 for deer..and the result thereof. I didn't ask anyone who flat out condemns it to even bother replying...no need to waste their time.
I only asked those who have used them for such to reply.

eagleye
05-05-2010, 06:20 PM
It's a good question. If your aren't interested just skip it. If you think it's bad idea, make your case. Copping the attitude just isn't necessary and it make people feel less welcome to ask. (jerks)

Forger- if that's all I had around, i would not hesitate. For a good while a 223 was all I had and as I stated, the only one (out of many)that ran was a bad shot. But I wouldn't risk the quartering shots. I am actually the same way with a 243. I shot a pretty heavy buck with a 243 front quarter and though he dropped, the only thing that made it to the lungs was a few fragments, luckily it was enough. I am a big fan of a nice exit wound. I like a heavy bullet at low enough speeds to hold together and plow through. I have never had any trouble finding deer shot through. It give a less dramatic smack down but there is less meat damage and the blood trail rules. A decent exit wound is my friend.

Pete

mattri
05-05-2010, 09:26 PM
It can certainly be done. You'll need to check the regs where you live/hunt. As with most things it depends on you. How accurate do you place your shots? What bullets, range, size of deer? A 250lb mulie is a lot different than a little southeast deer.

Uncle Jack
05-06-2010, 11:08 AM
".....and how effective is it ?"

Just start with 140lb VC or NVR and work from there.

uj

savageboy
05-06-2010, 11:16 AM
I have killed 14 deer w/ an 18" AR 1:7 twist w/ the Sierra 65gr. Gameking and a stiff load of AA2520. Shots were from 80-165 yds. All 1 shot dead.

borg
05-06-2010, 07:27 PM
*sigh* Fine, I'll be serious. If I were you, I'd use an expanding copper solid such as Barnes Triple Shock in the heaviest weight that your rifle will stabilize. Since bullet length is actually more important than bullet weight when it comes to whether or not a given twist rate can stabilize the round in flight, start your load development with a lighter solid copper bullet than you would a jacketed bullet. Or you can use another stoutly designed round, such as the Nosler Partition.

I fully intend to deer hunt with my .223 some of the time, depending on the location I am. For example, while pushing near certain riverbanks they tend to cross my path at about 15-20 yards, and I would not hesitate to shoot one with a .223 at that range.

forger
05-10-2010, 01:23 AM
Sorry if I sounded a bit short with some replies, but I have heard all the "NO" answers before. All I really wanted was replies from somebody who has actually used a .223 for deer.
Yes, whitetails here in the northeast do grow fairly large, but I should have qualified my question by adding that I am very deliberate with my shots and will not shoot at a running deer..unless it is running straight toward or away from me. Primarily for the safety factor and because I consider shot placement very critical.
As savageboy added, I have heard several advise the Sierra Gameking bullets . My rifle is a Savage 11G and I understand the rifling twist mitigates a 55 and up bullet. I have other centerfire rifles including a Marlin 336 in 30/30, but I want to bag a deer with my Savage.
The hunting regs here in NY State only require that the rifle be a "centerfire". I know that sounds a bit "iffy", but I am a hunter safety instructor and I have to be up to date with the regs.

kweeks10045
05-10-2010, 09:48 AM
Wow, be careful with that can of worms. Once you open it, all kinds of things come out, lol. I have used my 221 Fireball a couple of times. One doe at 140 yards and one at 240. They were broadside shots, both behind the shoulder. Obviously the 221 is a bit slower than the 223, so take from this what you will. The 240 yard shot passed through both lungs and broke the off side leg. The deer ran 30-35 yards and went down. The 140 yard shot, passed through both lungs and and left a quarter size hole out the back side. I was using 53 gr SMK's at 3000 fps. Hind sight being 20/20, I would limit my shots to 150 yards. This is personal preference and not because of any apparent limitations of the rifle.

I have shot 60 gr. Sierras with good accuracy and probably better suited for hunting. The 60gr Partition and 62 gr. TSX Barnes bullets should be phenomenal.

Let us know how it goes.

torjy
05-10-2010, 04:25 PM
some hunters use 50 cal here in Florida for deer hunting - no kidding :o

tammons
05-10-2010, 05:10 PM
Shoot them in the neck and no problems at all.

Other than that and I want a bigger bullet.

358Hammer
05-10-2010, 06:10 PM
Many here in Alaska me included, started our 8 year old children deer hunting with the 223 and 22-250; 55 grain soft point through both longs or head shot are fatal every time, NO exceptions!
I would venture to say that literally hundreds of deer fall every year around here to the 223.

Neal

forger
05-10-2010, 07:26 PM
Thanks guys;
Rarely is a shot beyond 100 yards necessary here. I live at the edge of the Allegany mts and it is more wooded than open..think I'll try it this fall...

Titan1
05-11-2010, 10:36 PM
I've seen and shot deer with a .223. If you are not a big fan of tracking a wounded animal until it dies use your 30/30. It's a roll of the dice to drop it in it's tracks with a .223,most times you'll lose.IMO we owe it to the game we hunt to dispatch the animal as quickly as possible. And the debate as to weather to use a .223 for deer will continue until the middle east runs out of sand!!

chunks7mm
05-15-2010, 10:29 AM
reason why most people loose animals is the get antsy and dont wait a fair amount of time....people who need uber calibers have no patients to wait a hour or so.....hell i have waited 1 -2 hours with a 45-70 and a 400gr soft point

that being said,shot placement is the key!
want a deer to drop instantly everytime,shoot them in the head....practice it...cant run when the head looks like a canoe

Out West
12-03-2010, 09:13 AM
I don't hunt deer with a 223 regularly, but this year I had an FP that I wanted test out in the field. I loaded with 68 HPBT Match ammo. This ammo in my gun will shoot groups the size of a dime at 100 yards. Anyway I shot a very nice 8 point on the second weekend this year.

With 223 I believe shot placement is critical. In my case I shot him in the neck and he dropped DRT. It was getting on to dusk and I knew he needed to go down fast or I'd have trouble tracking him. With the neck shot I figured my shot would either be a kill or a miss. But with lots of bench time on this rifle I knew I could make the shot.

The HPBT performed superbly. Upon skinning I found the spine was completely severed, it looked like one vertebra (sp?) completely destroyed, and there was a smooth one inch hole all the way through his neck. I could stick a finger in from each side and touch in the middle. Intresting to me is that all the damage was not detectable with the skin on. I could barely find the entry hole before skinning.

Out West