Page 1 of 2 12 LastLast
Results 1 to 10 of 14

Thread: .338 Win Mag for Whitetails

  1. #1
    Loyal Member

    User Info Menu

    Default .338 Win Mag for Whitetails

    Ok so first thoughts are likely that’s way to much gun for whitetails and I would have totally agreed a few years ago but now I have completely changed my mind. Now this is not something I set out to do, I was put into this situation by chance and finances. My dedicated whitetail tool was (notice the WAS) a Remington 700 in .270 Win. A beautiful firearm that has been an absolute success in my hands for many years and never let me down particularly since I dialed a pet hand load that really made the accuracy and trajectory shine. Years passed and I got married etc and my wife decided she wanted to give deer hunting a try. Now I own a .338 Win Mag, a gun I was convinced to buy for a Moose hunt after hearing some stories about .270’s and .308’s not being as efficient as the 300 Win Mag or .338 Win Mag. (We’ve all been around that discussion multiple times so let’s just leave that as different strokes for different folks) Anyway I wasn’t in a position to get another centerfire rifle and who knew if she was going to like deer hunting in November anyways. She loves it. It’s her favourite outdoor activity to do period and with my 270 she has proven very efficient in taking deer (not 1 of her 5 has been taken under 130yds). So I used the .338 because it was what I had and I had to make do. Now I was nervous about the carnage that beast would unleash (it’s a Browning X-Bolt btw) and after I took the first deer with it I was kinda surprised how little damage there was, maybe I got lucky? another year later same thing. Year after that, beautiful exit, minimal hydrostatic shock on exit side. Every year in the last six years has been the same. The side bonus is I never have to track anything because they drop on the spot. So ya, it’s a big caliber and I don’t say I’d recommend it if all you are doing is deer hunting but at this point my wife has declared the 270 as “her gun” and I don’t think I will bother getting another 270 because the 338 is working out just fine.
    Wondering if anyone else has found themselves using calibers that wouldn’t normally be associated with whitetails? I’m using hand loads with a 200gr Hornady interlock bullet if anyone was wondering what I’m shooting to have these results.

  2. # ADS
    Advertisement
    ADVERTISEMENT
     

  3. #2
    Member for Life

    User Info Menu

    Default

    I endured the same skepticism and derision at my first deer camp when I hauled out a 7mm Rem Mag round and lay it on the table. The others were using traditional .308 and 30-06 in 180 and 220 gr, typical of what many of the other hunters in the area were using. I took a nice healthy 8 pointer next morning with a 175 gr Partition bullet. One shot in one side and straight out the other leaving a small hole and very insignificant meat loss. That deer went about the 3 ft straight down.
    The others also took their deer and their slower 30 cal bullets tore ragged exit holes the size of a baseball. We processed those deer and not one word was said about my 'cannon'.

  4. #3
    Borderline Spammer

    User Info Menu

    Default

    I use a 300 win mag for all my big game hunting from deer to moose, a few buddies use 300 short mags and even a few 300 ultra mags. Just stay away from heavy bone and they are quick and efficient.

  5. #4
    Leads by example

    User Info Menu

    Default

    I used a 300wm this season and a few seasons ago. I too was surprised at such minimal damage. Small entrance and exit holes. Definitely worth the bonus of not having to track and drag for long.

  6. #5
    Leads by example

    User Info Menu

    Default

    I have taken a few black bear with my 300 WM with little meat damage. The key with an caliber is to use well constructive quality ammo
    Guns have two enemies................rust and government

    OFAH and CCFR member

  7. #6
    Apprentice

    User Info Menu

    Default

    We had 7 deer come into camp this year and the most meat loss to any of the front shoulders was done by a 243 at around 70yds. Everyone else uses 270,30-06,308,6.5CM and 270WSM

  8. #7
    Post-a-holic

    User Info Menu

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by cantgetright View Post
    We had 7 deer come into camp this year and the most meat loss to any of the front shoulders was done by a 243 at around 70yds. Everyone else uses 270,30-06,308,6.5CM and 270WSM
    That’s interesting I took my first deer with a .243, using 100 grain jacketed bullet. It pass straight through heart and out the other side of the rib cage with minimal damage or waste. I can only image that your shooter’s bullet hit a heavy bone area, or he may have been using a light grain bullet. I have a picture of a carcass of a deer hit with a .35 caliber cast bullet and looks like the bullet blow the shoulder joint right out of the deer. A lot of times it is what the bullet hits as it passes through the animal, that results in a lot of damage and waste.


    You don’t stop hunting because you grow old. You grow old because you stop hunting.
    -Gun Nut

  9. #8
    Has too much time on their hands

    User Info Menu

    Default

    So this is what Dave Petal, Field and Stream Editor, said about 20 years ago, in his article, "12 top Deer Cartridges."

    "** .338. ** The true province of the .338 is elk and bear, but it's a wonderful deer cartridge as well. The .338 is loaded with bullets ranging from 200 to 250 grains, and I prefer the ones on the heavier end of the scale because they destroy so little meat. The .338 kicks, and it will tear your head off if you use it in a rifle under 8 1/2 pounds. But it puts deer down right now."
    I actually read a very good article 45 or so years ago, possibly by Wilf Pyle, about deer hunting with the .375 H&H. Why not? If it's the rifle you have, or the one you want to use, have at 'er!

  10. #9
    Needs a new keyboard

    User Info Menu

    Default

    My first modern high-powered rifle was a .300 Win Mag using 180 grain bullets. Other hunters that I knew frowned on it as a deer rifle. They said it was “too much gun” or it would “waste a lot of meat”. Neither was true and I came to the conclusion that most hunters know very little about firearms, ballistics, or shooting.

  11. #10
    Has all the answers

    User Info Menu

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by Sam Menard View Post
    My first modern high-powered rifle was a .300 Win Mag using 180 grain bullets. Other hunters that I knew frowned on it as a deer rifle. They said it was “too much gun” or it would “waste a lot of meat”. Neither was true and I came to the conclusion that most hunters know very little about firearms, ballistics, or shooting.
    Unfortunately theres some truth to that. The number of people I have firsthand knowledge of that literally pick up their weapon of choice and go hunting without practice or zeroing in is astounding. Pay 2000 for a moose hunt and dont even bother sighting in their gun annually then wonder why they dont hit anything. Another guy who has thousands invested in hunting gear but never read an article or book on whitetail hunting, never practices or sights in, wounded a couple deer and doesn't put in any effort to recover...Furthermore are the ones I know personally brag about being a hunter but can't manage to fill a deer tag in 6 years despite having sole access so some of the best whitetail hunting property in Ontario.

    Calibre doesnt matter as much as how you use it, I think only ignorant people would argue otherwise.
    Last edited by Deer Wrastler; November 13th, 2020 at 09:56 PM.

Page 1 of 2 12 LastLast

Tags for this Thread

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •