Harvester...click on my "handle" and go back and do a search on topics I have discussed and you will have a better background of my experiences...
In a nutshell...yes...my passions include American longrifles...I have built/hunted with and competed with since 1975....I also give talks on American history at local schools where I bring in examples of my flinters and demonstrate to the students...
I grew up on a farm, dad was a John Deere dealer, so I was hunting with him before grade school...by the time I was 10-12 I had my own 12 gauge and a .22 and loved to squirrel, rabbit, quail, dove, crow hunt....That is how I learned to shoot and hunt....One of the problems I see with the guests we bring up to hunt our farms is that they didn't learn the hunting/shooting skills when they were younger, so their marksmanship is...average...I am from a big family, we own 3 farms in eastern NC...about 850 acres, and raise corn, peanuts, soybeans, wheat, cotton and deer...lots of deer...I was helping to control the deer population on our farms by the time I was 15....It wasn't unusual to see 30-40 deer in our peanuts, beans, etc.....I actually started with a 22-250....but, thats another story....
Through the years we have learned that to control the population, so the farmer won't spotlight the deer in the summer (Legal...because he is the farmer, he quit, when I suggested that I was going to take him out behind the barn if I ever caught him doing it again)...we have found that if we remove 40-50 deer a year from the 3 farms that he doesn't have too much crop damage and we still have a good healthy population to hunt...
We have been harvesting this many deer for about 25 years....The limit in NC is 6 a year....Being landowners, we also get extra doe tags....So I can assure you...140 deer was not an embellishment...if anything I am being conservative...Our bow season runs one month...Gun season almost 3.
The study I was referring to was conducted by Charles Ruth..A wildlife biologist for the state of SC Dept of Natural Resources, because he wanted scientific proof as to the most effective deer calibers...It was conducted at the Cedar Knoll Club in SC...the article states that they recorded every shot fired on the clubs land (603 shots) ...493 deer killed..
They recorded distance the animal was from the shot, type bullet used, how far the animal went before recovered, where the shot hit....They also discovered (as most if us know) that when hunters used softer bullets vs harder bullets the deer dropped quicker...So, if you don't believe me....contact Mr. Ruth...
Now...you mentioned that the larger diameter bullet, the larger hole.....
Not exactly....In muzzleloaders, shooting patched round balls...yep thats true....Shooting a high powered centerfire rifle...not true at all....As I have mentioned on here in the past...from 1980 until 1995 I used 100 gr CoreLokts on deer....During this time period I killed about 75 deer with CoreLokts, they did fine, but newer "Premium" bullets were being offered...I wanted to try them all, so I started by sighting in with a particular buller, and killed 5-6 deer with and examined the carcass....
There is a huge difference in the wound channel made between different bullets....A "hard" 130 gr .270 bullet can make a smaller exit hold than a "softer" 100 gr .243 bullet...The thickness of the jacket, the hardness of the lead inside of the bullet, type of tip or exposed lead...all of these make a big difference....The hardest bullets I ever tried in a .243 were the Remington Premium 100gr BTSP....they have quit making them....They always gave me full penetration, even on high shoulder shots...on lung shots they gave about a half inch size hole...deer ran farther after the shot with this bullet than any other bullet I used...I quit using them they were so hard....I had 2 deer that ran 125 yards after the shot...if these had been hit with a Federal Sierra 100gr BTSP or the 85gr BTHP, they wouldn't have made it 50 yards....
You also mentioned that a larger hole killed quicker....To a degree, yes...as shown by the above example....A big part is where the hole is.....
If I need to drop a deer in its tracks (and with our swamps in eastern NC and cutovers sometimes this does need to be done)...I usually put the bullet through the shoulder blades or use a high lung shot...This is also where a softer bullet helps....you put the shock of a fast moving bullet 3-4 inches under the spine...the deer drops....I do not like this shot with a slow moving muzzleloader though, it doesn't always drop them right there.....
Now, on lung shots...you are hard pressed to see any difference between the 130 Sierra BTSP my brother and his son use and when I use a 100gr Sierra BTSP....Deer hit with a broadside center lung shot hit....usually run from 25-75 yards.....When you open up the body cavity it is mush...So I can't really tell you how "wide" the wound channel is, when you hit lungs they explode like a gallon jug filled with water...
While we are on this bigger is better theory...let me tell you an incident that happened about 5-6 years ago....My youngest brother (he is now 44 I'm 50) and I were hunting together, on the ground in late December, over a winter wheat field....between 18-25 does had been feeding in this field so we decided to take a couple out....On schedule the does started piling out of a cutover beside the field right after sundown...we had a group of 5 that stepped out and started feeding our way...When they got about 150 yards away we both took a rest, him on an old fence post, me on a oak tree....
We decided which 2 we were going to take out...Brother said shoot on 3...and started counting....Well...he never said 3...it was 1-2 BANG....My deer bolted....I put the cross hairs on another doe and shot...Brother was laughing...He knew what he was doing....Anyway he was shooting 130 Federal Premium Sierra BTSP...I was shooting Federal Premium 100gr Sierra BTSP...We walked out to the field to find our blood trails....Only found one...Followed it into the woods...The doe was laying there, had run about 75 yards...We looked around, couldn't find the other doe...Brother was starting to think he had missed.....We went back and looked at the doe laying there...2 exit holes...2 entrance holes....Both lung shots....
How in the world a 100 pound doe can take 2 good hits in the lungs and still run 75 yards is amazing....But she did...Bigger holes don't always mean faster kills....Put the hole where you need to for the situation you have....As I mentened earlier...in my teens I used a 22-250...If I would wait until the deer got 75-80 yards into the field they usually didn't make it back to the woods...If I needed to drop them I put the bullet at the base of the neck....And this was way before the 60 gr Nosler Partition that Federal loads now....My 15yr old niece dropped 2 does in their tracks over Thanksgiving this year with brothers 22-250 and the Noslers....High shoulder shots....Exit hole the size of a quarter...
When I get asked by locals what deer cartridge they should buy I usually tell them .270....I actually am not in love with the .243, growing up working on a farm and using equipment, taught me how to look at tools and equipment....Thats how I look at guns...I just want something that works....I have never passed on a shot because I was using a .243...I have with a bow, I have with a flinter, I have with a shotgun....I don't like to skin deer with their guts blown up, and I'm too dang old to be in the swamps tracking them after dark....After cleaning hundreds of deer shot with a mess of different calibers and bullets I have found that bullet makeup and shot placement are what you need to focus on....I recommend the .270 because the average hunter can't always place his bullet where it needs to be (not just marksmanship but when the deer is quartering also) and doesn't always have the patience to wait until the proper time to shoot or doesn't know how to stop the deer and have it give you a good shot...We have had cases on our farms where a guy comes in for the weekend with a 7mm Mag....has a bad problem with flinching...Never admits it...Shoots at a deer, wounds it, gets into the swamp, bears or coyotes get to it that night....If there was a way to measure, I would bet that more deer are wounded each year by hunters flinching than by shooting a lighter kicking cartridge.....I have actually had some of these guys ask me what I use, when I tell them, they ask "Will that kill a deer?"....Doesn't bother me, I get that same question when I pull out my .54 caliber flintlock that I made 16 or so years ago....Except
then I tell them that Daniel Boone died in his sleep, this is all he ever had and he was almost 85...
Another reason hunters miss or worse wound deer is from "buck fever"....I have never understood how a grown man can almost pee in his pants when a decent buck comes by...About 3 years ago we were hunting during the muzzleloader season...We had one hunter setup over a bean field...When a buck comes out of the woods and makes his way to a treelind 100 yards from the hunter....the buck proceeds to make a scrape and rub his antlers on a tree.....this guy got so nervous that he couldn't shoot....he would raise his gun, but the crosshairs wouldn't settle down...Now this guy is 38-40 years old, had hunted for years....Later he was even laughing at himself....He did kill a nice buck later that afternoon...At the same scrape...after the first one left....It took us awhile to track that deer....He thought it was huge....Well it was a decent 9 point but we had a little ground shrinkage...
Having 2 brothers I can assure you that we have had this same discussion many times during the last 25 years....My youngest as stated before has two .270s, one for him, one for his son....My other brother has a .280 for himself and a 7mm-08 for his son...I haven't seen much difference in how far a deer runs after the shot with any of these....using similiar bullets and when hit in the same place...By the way....neither of my brothers has a question about a .243 anymore...nor do any of my regular hunting buddies....And the guys that come down with the magnums....I don't have to tell them anything, its always a niece, nephew, cousin, etc...
If I lived in say Colorado, I would want to hunt elk...I would probably have a .300 Win Mag....If I hunted woods only, might want to use a .308...In Texas, on the King Ranch .270...In Canada...30-06....But I shoot year round and more than just deer...I usually buy a case of shells a year, so I get the same lot number...In my case the .243 works well....
I hope this answers your questions, If I missed anything please feel free to ask....I didn't see (or missed) where you had tried a .243...If I missed I'm sorry to bring it up...If you have, which bullets did you try?? And how did it fail you??? I'm always happy to help.
As far as the government....couple of questions....When did the FBI start hunting deer?

And, "Who really killed Kennedy???" :-D :lol: