While IÂ’m a fan of the .44 Mag cartridge, I own a Ruger Super Redhawk and Browning B92 lever-action carbine and have hunted both elk and deer with the cartridge, I have to say it has itÂ’s bad points as well as its good ones.
On the plus side, the cartridges are relatively inexpensive for non-handloaders. This hopefully translates to more shooting. Driving a 240g Speer JSP at 1880fps, the bullet delivers 1500fpe out to about 50 yards and 1000fpe out to 135 yards. It has plenty of the ‘right stuff’ within its range – the bullet diameter and weight do a lot to make up for low velocity and pass-throughs are not uncommon. (People will disagree as to what “its range” is, but I put it at about the 1000fpe mark.)
On the flip side, recoil can be a bit stiff in carbines but a slip-on recoil pad will tame it right down. (My Browning has a steel buttplate – ouch!) It’s not the rifle I want in my hands when a 200-yard shot if offered, something I would take with a 170g .30-30, so it may make sense as a first deer cartridge in some areas and not in others.
In AZ it is not what I would choose as a first deer rifle unless money for ammo was a major concern. Relatively inexpensive surplus ammo is available for the .308 Win and I would give it strong consideration. The .308 has a much greater reach and is a cartridge you will never outgrow – 1500fpe out past 370 yards and suitable for anything up to elk or moose, and recoil is no greater than my .44 Mag carbine. I picked up a used .308 last year and wish I’d gotten one 30 years ago.
My 2 cents.