.243 to .223, purely for fox 🤔

I would have absolutely no idea, much like anyone else.

However I believe there must be some truth in lead effecting the fertility of birds of prey if not actually killing them.
I come to believe this because I have customers willing to pay silly money for Rabbits and Squirrels that are shot with non toxic bullets and pellets.
Half a dozen to 8, full grown whole Rabbits bring as much as a Roe Doe will from a game dealer.
I don't know if these customers are just being overly careful or not. They tell me any lead fed to their birds would be catastrophic.
Who am I to question their knowledge on the keeping, and breeding of birds of prey.
It's all good business for me.
Yes but that assumes that every single wild bird consumes lead, they don't.
Also, despite lead ammunitions birds of prey and scavengers are NOT in decline. They are increasing.
Using captive birds as a model is not reasonable.
 
Have a look at the Virtus precision copper it works well in my .243
I also home load nosler 55g ballistic tip for foxes very fast round and does the job.
 
@seedawood - A quick google search of eagles eating foxes will bring up a number of different articles showing that golden and sea eagles have been found to have remains of foxes in their nest.

Eagles are perfectly capable of catching, killing and carrying foxes back to nests. They are are also big carrion eaters. Rather than expending lots of energy carrying a fox, they would probably just eat it where it lies, fill up their crop and fly back with a crop full for their chicks.
Eagle carrying a fox? Is that fact or just made up?
 
Morning all,

I'm looking for feedback from anyone using the .223 for foxing on open ground pushing out to 250–300 yards (not always possible to get closer/engineer a shot)

I currently use a .243 with 75gr V-MAX, which is a hammer on foxes. However, with the HSE lead ban looming for calibers over 6.17mm, I’m considering a move to .223 to stay lead-legal for vermin without the headache.

Other drivers for the switch:
  • NV White-out: My .243 flash blinds my Alpex 4K for a second, making it hard to spot impacts, is the .223 better in this regard???
  • Frugality: Cheaper to run for high-volume nights and less wear on the barrel. (Handload the .243 for deer with copper. But not for foxing)
  • Signature: Looking for a lower muzzle report and less recoil to stay on target, especially when I have multiple foxes out.
My concerns:
The Welsh hills aren't known for being still. How does the .223 compare to the 6mm for knockdown and wind drift at those 300-yard boundaries? Are you finding it "enough" gun when the weather isn't playing ball?

I am completely happy with the .243 for smaller deer and I have a fantastic TTSX load for that purpose!

I am also happy that I have a perfectly justifiable reason to aquire if I go down this route! And will be putting in for "All lawful quarry" as per all my other rifles. Just added a further 2 sheep farms to the permission for pre lambing thin out and continued overwatch during!

Cheers in advance for any insights.
I’m using a .223 ackley reliably for those ranges, I’ve run it at standard .223 velocities and works fine in all weather, including west wales!
 
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Morning all,

I'm looking for feedback from anyone using the .223 for foxing on open ground pushing out to 250–300 yards (not always possible to get closer/engineer a shot)

I currently use a .243 with 75gr V-MAX, which is a hammer on foxes. However, with the HSE lead ban looming for calibers over 6.17mm, I’m considering a move to .223 to stay lead-legal for vermin without the headache.

Other drivers for the switch:
  • NV White-out: My .243 flash blinds my Alpex 4K for a second, making it hard to spot impacts, is the .223 better in this regard???
  • Frugality: Cheaper to run for high-volume nights and less wear on the barrel. (Handload the .243 for deer with copper. But not for foxing)
  • Signature: Looking for a lower muzzle report and less recoil to stay on target, especially when I have multiple foxes out.
My concerns:
The Welsh hills aren't known for being still. How does the .223 compare to the 6mm for knockdown and wind drift at those 300-yard boundaries? Are you finding it "enough" gun when the weather isn't playing ball?

I am completely happy with the .243 for smaller deer and I have a fantastic TTSX load for that purpose!

I am also happy that I have a perfectly justifiable reason to aquire if I go down this route! And will be putting in for "All lawful quarry" as per all my other rifles. Just added a further 2 sheep farms to the permission for pre lambing thin out and continued overwatch during!

Cheers in advance for any insights.

90% of my shooting is in, on and around the Brecon Beacons. I use .243 Sako 8 twist 75 or 87grn vmax homeloads, I can go to non lead with this when I have to. I also regularly shoot my tikka .204 using 32grn vmax homeloads, 200m zero. Brilliant round and less affected by wind than one might think. Its capable of 300m+ when I get my bit right. Some foxes run, not many, generally in a wide circle, then drop. I understand that beyond 200m it will out perform a .223 as it has a much better bc.
I will stick with the .243 and .204 they cover most of my shooting.
 
Ive seen a golden kill a fox, just read and they carry about their own body weight, i guess cubs would fit the bill.
Have you seen it happen?
No I haven’t seen a golden take a fox. I have seen them worrying red deer calves. In Africa I did see an eagle, I think a martial take a duiker sized antelope - about size of muntjac. There are plenty of reports of fox remains in eagle nests.
 
Seconding others who've commented, I use the 55gr Hornady V-Max running at around 3300fps and it is very effective out to 300 (and occasionally beyond). Hardly any recoil either compared with .243 👍
 
Lots of folk forget a crucial element of influence on a bullets performance.
The rifling.
One rifle can turn a game bullet into and an explosive varmint bullet and another cause the bullet to perform as originally intended.

A change of bullet or barrel can make the difference.
 
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