OhHeyThereBen
Active member
This season I was able to take 4 whitetails with a rifle and two with a bow. My dad and brother added three to the mix as well with their rifles. Up until this season all I had been loading for us was Hornady ELD-X and SSTs in our 30-06s and I hunted a bit with my 6.5 MB as well. With two years of reloaded ammunition under our belts I'm deciding to switch us all over to something else as the Hornadys have just had too much meat damage on quartering shots.
I wish I had pictures of everything to show you guys, but I didn't think to take any. Here's a summary of the shots:
1. 143gr ELD-X going ~2750 fps. Doe at 200 yards quartering to. The bullet hit the elbow of the front leg, broke apart, blew up the heart, and hardly exited. No bullet pieces were recovered. The doe ran 50 yards hard and died ethically.
2. Same load as above. Doe at 230 yards quartering away. The bullet entered at the last rib, hitting the rib, and exited somehow on the same side. Although I'm quite unhappy that it didn't punch through and exit in front of the off side shoulder, the doe did die quickly and dropped on the spot. Again, there was a lot of internal damage, but the bullet didn't make it in as far as I'd hoped.
3. Same load as above. Doe at 250 yards broadside. Perfect shot behind the shoulder with an exit in the same spot. She ran about 50 yards and ethically died. The exit hole was quite large and what should have been a shot that resulted in little to no meat loss instead resulted in some meat loss on the off side shoulder.
4. 165gr SST in '06 going ~2700 fps. 100 yard shot was towards the back of the lungs and dropped the animal instantly. What should have been perfect resulted in a bit of backstrap meat being ruined.
5. Same as '06 above. 100 yard quartering to shot, detached the heart after hitting front shoulder. Front shoulder was probably 50% ruined.
6. Same as '06 above. 100 yard broadside shot. Blew up heart with a large exit, no meat ruined.
7. 165gr Accubond going ~2750 fps. 60-70 yard quartering to shot on a buck. Entered in front of the front shoulder and exited behind the off-side shoulder. No meat loss whatsoever and he dropped in his tracks.
I have and always will stand up for the Hornady bullets because they provide really great accuracy and reliable performance on everything I've shot with them for a great price. However, now that I'm in a bit different stage of my life, I'm able to afford to spend a little more on reloading components. I know that many of you will suggest trying monometal, and I just might do that, but I'm probably going to stick with the accubond for my dad and two brothers as it seems to be a solid bullet to get them set up with quickly (they don't like pissing around as much as I do and get impatient with load testing).
This isn't meant to be a discussion thread, I'm just hoping to share a bit of information to everyone here. The above kills are great examples of what some of the non-bonded and non-monometal bullets will do and it's what you should expect them to do. If this isn't acceptable to you then you should make sure that you go with a more premium bullet of your choice.
I wish I had pictures of everything to show you guys, but I didn't think to take any. Here's a summary of the shots:
1. 143gr ELD-X going ~2750 fps. Doe at 200 yards quartering to. The bullet hit the elbow of the front leg, broke apart, blew up the heart, and hardly exited. No bullet pieces were recovered. The doe ran 50 yards hard and died ethically.
2. Same load as above. Doe at 230 yards quartering away. The bullet entered at the last rib, hitting the rib, and exited somehow on the same side. Although I'm quite unhappy that it didn't punch through and exit in front of the off side shoulder, the doe did die quickly and dropped on the spot. Again, there was a lot of internal damage, but the bullet didn't make it in as far as I'd hoped.
3. Same load as above. Doe at 250 yards broadside. Perfect shot behind the shoulder with an exit in the same spot. She ran about 50 yards and ethically died. The exit hole was quite large and what should have been a shot that resulted in little to no meat loss instead resulted in some meat loss on the off side shoulder.
4. 165gr SST in '06 going ~2700 fps. 100 yard shot was towards the back of the lungs and dropped the animal instantly. What should have been perfect resulted in a bit of backstrap meat being ruined.
5. Same as '06 above. 100 yard quartering to shot, detached the heart after hitting front shoulder. Front shoulder was probably 50% ruined.
6. Same as '06 above. 100 yard broadside shot. Blew up heart with a large exit, no meat ruined.
7. 165gr Accubond going ~2750 fps. 60-70 yard quartering to shot on a buck. Entered in front of the front shoulder and exited behind the off-side shoulder. No meat loss whatsoever and he dropped in his tracks.
I have and always will stand up for the Hornady bullets because they provide really great accuracy and reliable performance on everything I've shot with them for a great price. However, now that I'm in a bit different stage of my life, I'm able to afford to spend a little more on reloading components. I know that many of you will suggest trying monometal, and I just might do that, but I'm probably going to stick with the accubond for my dad and two brothers as it seems to be a solid bullet to get them set up with quickly (they don't like pissing around as much as I do and get impatient with load testing).
This isn't meant to be a discussion thread, I'm just hoping to share a bit of information to everyone here. The above kills are great examples of what some of the non-bonded and non-monometal bullets will do and it's what you should expect them to do. If this isn't acceptable to you then you should make sure that you go with a more premium bullet of your choice.