I don't care nor do the deerWhy so slow?
My .280 pushes a 140 at 3200…..
Or the tortoise and the hare.
No bits of paper were harmed with the speed of my .270

I don't care nor do the deerWhy so slow?
My .280 pushes a 140 at 3200…..

In my opinion 70 - 80 grain copper is where it’s at.Get a .243 100 grn SP half decent scope sorted that will any deer in the uk no problem
In my opinion 70 - 80 grain copper is where it’s at.
I have a secret soft spot for the 85grn partition too, a great .242 deer bullet! What 100 grn are you using?Yep sounds good
But I've got stacks of 100grn in lead it ain’t over yet![]()
Super performance 100 grn sp I don’t reload anymore they are really quick and stay the distance, really good round and the 75 grn I think for a phenomenal foxing roundI have a secret soft spot for the 85grn partition too, a great .242 deer bullet! What 100 grn are you using?
all this talk about .243v.308 seems to focus on what is wrong with .243? what is "wrong" with .308? recoil? use a 125 bullet, on a moderated rifle the recoil is negligible, bullet drop? again all the main calibres are comparable to 250m and over that is probably not an issue for a novice to be worried about!
now, against the .243 personally I have never felt the need for anything more (or less) than a .308, 125/150 for deer, 155/168/175 target and 180 for the piggies, not sure a .243 will do all that and if used for target (.243) then barrel life becomes an issue, as does barrel life in a second hand rifle.
at the end of the day, either will do the job if used within their limits with the right ammo, and both should be easy to feed with shop ammo (not everyone reloads) and the random fox wont complain if you hit them with a .308 either .
if you want a varmint rifle that can handle the occasional deer then .243 will do the job
if you want a deer rifle that can handle the occasional bigger deer than .308 will do the job
horses for courses![]()