

One like this is taking up space around here. Was my dads and will get given to one of two people that have southern paws like he did. Doesn't cost me a thing to wipe it down once a year .jeepnik wrote:There's a .243 that floats around the family. It's been the rifle most of us learned to hunt larger game with. My only problem with it was that I'm a southpaw, so I had to learn to adapt. There are three other southpaws that have done the same, all after me, so I pointed them in the right direction.
Right now a grand niece has it. She's a little thing, but she can put the bullet where she wants it.
All bullets have their proper niche, as well....FWiedner wrote:It was pitch black, and I was standing 8 feet away from a 150lb feral sow with her nose buried in a pile of feed corn.
I had walked up to the spot in the dark when I saw the sow and her sounder of piglets through the night-vision scope that I had put on top of a single shot Handi-Rifle in .243. (Man was that set-up was UGLY.)
I set my sights on a spot just behind the sow's left ear and pulled the trigger. There was a flood of piglets running over and around my feet as the 100gr soft point bullet barked out and crashed into the sow's neck at 2900fps.
The sow... was dead.
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Now why do I relate this short tale? There I was, at point-blank range on a medium-sized animal, shot it with a .243 Win 100gr SP traveling 2900fps at a downward quartering-angle in the neck, and the bullet did not achieve a full penetration.
Just that. I had always heard good things about the versatility of the .243 as a hunting round, but I'd never used it for hunting before, and I was surprised that a 100gr bullet moving that fast would get stopped by a little ol' pig.
That experience put me off the .243 for a while, but eventually I did consider that feral pigs are a bit tougher through vital areas than the average deer, and well... the pig WAS dead...
Anyway... In the great firearms universe, all cartridges have their niche...
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I don't think anyone was making a lefty version when ours was made. I didn't get a left handed bolt gun until sometime in the early 70's. I remember seeing an ad for a southpaw Remmy 700. Had to have one, waited almost a year to get it. Like most things it seems they announce them months before they are available.1894 wrote:One like this is taking up space around here. Was my dads and will get given to one of two people that have southern paws like he did. Doesn't cost me a thing to wipe it down once a year .jeepnik wrote:There's a .243 that floats around the family. It's been the rifle most of us learned to hunt larger game with. My only problem with it was that I'm a southpaw, so I had to learn to adapt. There are three other southpaws that have done the same, all after me, so I pointed them in the right direction.
Right now a grand niece has it. She's a little thing, but she can put the bullet where she wants it.
https://s.yimg.com/fz/api/res/1.2/z2J3R ... 2724_2.jpg
A few years back I had a tang safety 77RSI in 308 WIN , once I put a RifleBasix sear in the gun it was a pretty nice little deer rifle .
FWiedner wrote: Now why do I relate this short tale? There I was, at point-blank range on a medium-sized animal, shot it with a .243 Win 100gr SP traveling 2900fps at a downward quartering-angle in the neck, and the bullet did not achieve a full penetration.
Just that.
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When I got the 700BDL 243 in 1973 my grandfather was adamant about me taking headshots only as if it were a squirrel . And that year I sure enough shot a poor old unsuspecting doe at about 50 yards right thru the temple and down she went . The one above in the picture I shot was behind the shoulder thru both lungs and she made it perhaps 40-50 from where I shot her . If a person is a lot more "patient" then the average hunter I think they will be fine with a 243 WIN or 6mm REM or 243 WSSM or 250 Savage or 257 Bob as I lump all those cartridges in the same category as far as killing deer is concerned .Streetstar wrote:FWiedner wrote: Now why do I relate this short tale? There I was, at point-blank range on a medium-sized animal, shot it with a .243 Win 100gr SP traveling 2900fps at a downward quartering-angle in the neck, and the bullet did not achieve a full penetration.
Just that.
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This more or less echoes my thoughts on the 243 ----- the lack of penetration or a good blood trail to follow is reason enough for me to never bother with one again
Streetstar wrote:FWiedner wrote: Now why do I relate this short tale? There I was, at point-blank range on a medium-sized animal, shot it with a .243 Win 100gr SP traveling 2900fps at a downward quartering-angle in the neck, and the bullet did not achieve a full penetration.
Just that.
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This more or less echoes my thoughts on the 243 ----- the lack of penetration or a good blood trail to follow is reason enough for me to never bother with one again
So....somewhere between 0 and 350 yards?FWiedner wrote:
Now why do I relate this short tale? There I was, at point-blank range on a medium-sized animal, shot it with a .243 Win 100gr SP traveling 2900fps at a downward quartering-angle in the neck, and the bullet did not achieve a full penetration.
vancelw wrote:So....somewhere between 0 and 350 yards?FWiedner wrote:
Now why do I relate this short tale? There I was, at point-blank range on a medium-sized animal, shot it with a .243 Win 100gr SP traveling 2900fps at a downward quartering-angle in the neck, and the bullet did not achieve a full penetration.
Rib-poking rangeFWiedner wrote:vancelw wrote:So....somewhere between 0 and 350 yards?FWiedner wrote:
Now why do I relate this short tale? There I was, at point-blank range on a medium-sized animal, shot it with a .243 Win 100gr SP traveling 2900fps at a downward quartering-angle in the neck, and the bullet did not achieve a full penetration.
Much closer to 0 than 350, but... yes...
You made me try and look up a "when was it made " on that savage 110L ( actually 2 , the other a .300 winmagnaboomer) , seems the old ser #s are in the dustbin of historyjeepnik wrote:I don't think anyone was making a lefty version when ours was made. I didn't get a left handed bolt gun until sometime in the early 70's. I remember seeing an ad for a southpaw Remmy 700. Had to have one, waited almost a year to get it. Like most things it seems they announce them months before they are available.1894 wrote:One like this is taking up space around here. Was my dads and will get given to one of two people that have southern paws like he did. Doesn't cost me a thing to wipe it down once a year .jeepnik wrote:There's a .243 that floats around the family. It's been the rifle most of us learned to hunt larger game with. My only problem with it was that I'm a southpaw, so I had to learn to adapt. There are three other southpaws that have done the same, all after me, so I pointed them in the right direction.
Right now a grand niece has it. She's a little thing, but she can put the bullet where she wants it.
https://s.yimg.com/fz/api/res/1.2/z2J3R ... 2724_2.jpg