Over the years I have been fortunate to use a good few calibres for stalking, foxing and hunting abroad as well as range work. As many may know I have been using non- lead bullets for over 22 years and have found the Barnes TTSX bullets to be very effective. The majority of deer that I have shot over the years have been with either the good old reliable .308 (130g TTSX at 3000fps) or the 7mm Rem Mag (120g TTSX at 3300fps). I have also dabbled with the 6.5x47 with the 100g TTSX for the occasional roe but nothing frequent as I preferred other rifle configurations for stalking.
Over the last 2 months I have been using a 6.5x55 with the 120g TTSX at 3000fps. Since starting with the “new” 6.5 I have shot 11 deer (4 roe and 7 red deer). I have noticed that every chest shot deer has run on despite well placed shots, not by much- perhaps 20-50 yards, but enough to make me realise that it’s different to the .308 or 7mm, where I seldom see any run distances on roe and occasionally get a short run on reds. The red deer have also had quite a poor blood trail to follow despite well placed top of heart shots. The one bang- flop that I did have was an injured roe where the shot was quick and a tad high through both shoulder blades, grazing the bottom of the spine in the process. Now in all cases there were signs of good bullet expansion so I don’t hold that the bullets have pencilled, but the effect on deer, call it stopping power if you like, was noticeably less than I am accustomed to.
When comparing the muzzle energies the 6.5x55 is 2398ft-lbs, the .308 is 2598ft-lbs and the 7mm is 2902ft-lbs. Sure there is a difference but in reality not enough to make much of a difference. My shot placement hasn’t changed, top of the heart is normal for broadside shots. This leaves the main variable being frontal area. Now I accept that the difference between .264, .284 and .308 is small but perhaps there is a bigger difference when comparing the frontal area of the expanded projectile.
Now clearly the next 20 animals I shoot may be bang- flops to reset the averages but I am interested to hear if anyone else has noted a similar effect when moving between larger and smaller calibres, when the bullet design is kept as consistent as possible?
Over the last 2 months I have been using a 6.5x55 with the 120g TTSX at 3000fps. Since starting with the “new” 6.5 I have shot 11 deer (4 roe and 7 red deer). I have noticed that every chest shot deer has run on despite well placed shots, not by much- perhaps 20-50 yards, but enough to make me realise that it’s different to the .308 or 7mm, where I seldom see any run distances on roe and occasionally get a short run on reds. The red deer have also had quite a poor blood trail to follow despite well placed top of heart shots. The one bang- flop that I did have was an injured roe where the shot was quick and a tad high through both shoulder blades, grazing the bottom of the spine in the process. Now in all cases there were signs of good bullet expansion so I don’t hold that the bullets have pencilled, but the effect on deer, call it stopping power if you like, was noticeably less than I am accustomed to.
When comparing the muzzle energies the 6.5x55 is 2398ft-lbs, the .308 is 2598ft-lbs and the 7mm is 2902ft-lbs. Sure there is a difference but in reality not enough to make much of a difference. My shot placement hasn’t changed, top of the heart is normal for broadside shots. This leaves the main variable being frontal area. Now I accept that the difference between .264, .284 and .308 is small but perhaps there is a bigger difference when comparing the frontal area of the expanded projectile.
Now clearly the next 20 animals I shoot may be bang- flops to reset the averages but I am interested to hear if anyone else has noted a similar effect when moving between larger and smaller calibres, when the bullet design is kept as consistent as possible?
