Varmint bullets on deer

/\ what he said. I used 87 grain vmax out of a 6xc on reds and sika, and they worked very well. I think the longest shot was 460 yards, and the closest about 10 - very emphatically dead in all cases.
longer ranges and faster expanding bullets expand less and slow expanding bullets might not expand
Placement is way the most important factor in a fast and humane kill
 
Saw my mate shoot a roebuck in scotland with 87g vmax, hit the shoulder and the bullet exploded.
Buck was never found, mate was charged for the shot and I could tell he felt a right tit! Kind of spoilt the trip for him. Why not just use a bullet that's designed for the job?
I saw a chap with a 300 win mag blow the shoulder off a fallow buck once. Next shot was back of the ribs / rumen. It was finally taken down with a well placed 243!

Hitting the right spot really helps!!
 
I never understood the "shoot em in the shoulder" thing with soft bullets.
Put the bullet in behind the shoulder, destroy the lungs and by the time the deer figures out what is wrong they are dead.

I have shot a lot of deer with 162 grain 7mm amax projectiles as well as the 87 vmaxes using this method, and in addition to working well, it damages practically no usable meat. Leave the shoulder shots for harder projectiles, where they need something to start expanding against.

Now I'm off to try and shoot a big red with a 156 grain 6.5 Norma Oryx - probably right through a mud covered shoulder.
 
I never understood the "shoot em in the shoulder" thing with soft bullets.
Put the bullet in behind the shoulder, destroy the lungs and by the time the deer figures out what is wrong they are dead.

I have shot a lot of deer with 162 grain 7mm amax projectiles as well as the 87 vmaxes using this method, and in addition to working well, it damages practically no usable meat. Leave the shoulder shots for harder projectiles, where they need something to start expanding against.

Now I'm off to try and shoot a big red with a 156 grain 6.5 Norma Oryx - probably right through a mud covered shoulder.
I generally agree.

However, with really aggressive expanding bullets, there is a tradeoff: it’s very easy to puncture the rumen if it’s a touch back. Not a bad shot - just one far enough back to miss the shoulder. I’ve seen quite a shots on smaller deer (roe, fallow calves and does, sika hinds etc) with things like vmax, amax and SST, where the shot has been a text book ‘meat saver’, but the rumen has been damaged. This seems to be either because it gets sucked out the exit, or bone and bullet fragments puncture it (or both).
 
There was a discussion here about Varmint bullets on deer. Just shot this muntjac at 80 yards with Sako gamehead Varmint .223 it dropped on the spot. First pic is the entry and the second is the exit. I’m convinced varmint bullets do work well
The game head isn’t a Varmint bullet though is it? It’s a game king which is a hunting bullet!
 
The game head isn’t a Varmint bullet though is it? It’s a game king which is a hunting bullet!
Not aware of Sako using Gamekings, since they have in-house SP bullets. Maybe some bizarre calibers they have'nt felt need to put up a production line, but certainly not 22cal.
 
It's Gamehead Pro not Gamehead (Sako), and Gamechanger not Gameking (Sierra). Furthermore you cannot find it anymore from Sako website. Gamehead Varmint you can find one way (All products - Ammunition) but not the other (Ammunition - Rapid Expansion Series).

I wouldn't put too much trust on getting Sako ammunition with non-Sako bullets in the future. Probly a distributor can get them with large enough order, but for some reason they're not advertised anymore (component availability and/or image marketing).
 
There was a discussion here about Varmint bullets on deer. Just shot this muntjac at 80 yards with Sako gamehead Varmint .223 it dropped on the spot. First pic is the entry and the second is the exit. I’m convinced varmint bullets do work well

I mean.....you're shooting a "deer" the size of a large fox so I'd imagine varmint bullets would. Send one through the shoulder of any of the other species and see how you fair out. Probably will still kill but wouldn't be my first choice
 
Only ever shot 2 deer with V-Max from my .270 .. both CWD's (on the same outing) The first was a head shot with predictable results. On the second one (H+L shot) the bullet had obviously hit a rib on the way in. Entry would was about 2" diameter but the exit wound was big enough to put both of my (not inconsiderable) fists in ! 3/4 of the ribcage on the 'far' side had simply vanished. Luckily, not too much good meat lost, but hells bells, it looked like it had been attacked with a grenade.
I stick to 130grain soft points for deer now and funnily enough they seem to fall over just fine ... DRT.
 
God knows! Luckily I was a long way away!!
Not the right gun to use on a cull say in a wood with a lot of stalkers all in the same area but in high seats.

Why not? More like the bullet choice was the problem more than the chambering. I'd put money on it that he was using a VMAX style varmint bullet and hit bone on the way in
 
It's Gamehead Pro not Gamehead (Sako), and Gamechanger not Gameking (Sierra). Furthermore you cannot find it anymore from Sako website. Gamehead Varmint you can find one way (All products - Ammunition) but not the other (Ammunition - Rapid Expansion Series).

I wouldn't put too much trust on getting Sako ammunition with non-Sako bullets in the future. Probly a distributor can get them with large enough order, but for some reason they're not advertised anymore (component availability and/or image marketing).
Sierra market the game changer as a tipped gameking.
 
I have never shot deer with a varmint bullet, but roos yes.
ONLY head shots and ONLY if I am absolutely sure of the shot.
Reason?
Because many many years ago I saw a varmint bullet explode on the shoulder of a 50kg roo creating a devastatingly horrible wound that would have led to a lingering death.
It blew the forearm clean off, but failed to penetrate the chest cavity.
 
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