243 for newbie shooting fallow

.243 95grn SST and high shoulder shot, drops them on the spot, if his shot drops low it'll still be in the vitals, and a decent margin for error either side. Some meat damage but he won't have to track them! I feel the .243 gets a bad deal, I love mine!

I use an X Bolt. Was £719 brand new from Malmo, have an Alpex on top and this setup has accounted for many deer and many, many foxes!

Point and shoot out to 200 yards with the 95 grain and further on foxes with 75 grain vmax.

Took a wild boar with it last week in the forest of Dean as well!

Drill shot placement into him and plenty of practice, the chance of error will decrease with time spent on the range! If the shots not right don't take it.

The .308 comes out to play on the big stuff but 90% of the time I reach for the .243
 
Last edited:
.243 95grn SST and high shoulder shot, drops them on the spot, if his shot drops low it'll still be in the vitals, and a decent margin for error either side. Some meat damage but he won't have to track them! I feel the .243 gets a bad deal, I love mine!

I use an X Bolt. Was £719 brand new from Malmo, have an Alpex on top and this setup has accounted for many deer and many, many foxes!

Point and shoot out to 200 yards with the 95 grain and further on foxes with 75 grain vmax.

Took a wild boar with it last week in the forest of Dean as well!

Drill shot placement into him and plenty of practice, the margin for error will decrease with time spent on the range! If the shots not right don't take it.

The .308 comes out to play on the big stuff but 90% of the time I reach for the .243
Amen...
 
The other thing with a lot of forces is that as a new shooter they would look more favourable on a .243 as a first deer rifle , then as experience is gained you’re more likely to be granted a .308 etc ,
I know it shouldn’t matter if you can show good cause for a calibre but all forces are different , plus the .243 would do all he requires
 
243 with the correct choice of bullet is a fantastic Killer of deer , shot one for decades ( dont have one now but have added the slot back - for a night culling gun ) . Just pick the right bullet for purpose
 
I’ve recently started using a .243 again. If you can get it and budget allows the hornady outfitter ammo loaded with the CX bullet is awesome on fallow.
This Saturday I Shot two at about 160 and another at 240, which ran out across the barley and left a great blood trail.
 

Attachments

  • IMG_4446.webp
    IMG_4446.webp
    873.6 KB · Views: 54
  • IMG_4448.webp
    IMG_4448.webp
    966.7 KB · Views: 53
  • IMG_4447.webp
    IMG_4447.webp
    925 KB · Views: 53
I’ve recently started using a .243 again. If you can get it and budget allows the hornady outfitter ammo loaded with the CX bullet is awesome on fallow.
This Saturday I Shot two at about 160 and another at 240, which ran out across the barley and left a great blood trail.
That is an impressive blood trail!
 
Should still consider buying new and maybe future proof 6.5CM although for Fallow a 308 might be better but then fox thrown in the 6.5CM might be a good compromise. I prefer new, even if Howa or Bergara to avoid buying some else's problem. 243 is great for fox and small deer but just a little light for larger deer. I know the 6.5x55... but we are noticing already ammo supply being less choices and availability compared to the CM. It is only going one way.
edi
 
They all go bang and all go smack. Probably a bigger hole better to leak fluid out. That said my biggest red was shot with the little .243. Recently being legal to now use 95grn noslers have proven to be amazing, reliably passing straight through reds. Selecting a .308 would be boringly simple
 
I’ve recently started using a .243 again. If you can get it and budget allows the hornady outfitter ammo loaded with the CX bullet is awesome on fallow.
This Saturday I Shot two at about 160 and another at 240, which ran out across the barley and left a great blood trail.
I’m using the 90 grain cx in my 6mm CM is proving to be very effective 👍
 
Try and buy a rifle that can be fired to see how well it shoots / groups. Rifles and scopes are of course subjective, but a rifle incapable of a decent group in any calibre should not be considered. Price does not dictate this in all circumstances, my 84 year old Dad has a Parker Hale 243 that still shoots a clover leaf group at 100 yards, but one I owned (from new) many years ago struggled to hold even a 2.5 inch group, with either of us shooting it. If you ever read this far down the thread, good luck.
 
I’ve recently started using a .243 again. If you can get it and budget allows the hornady outfitter ammo loaded with the CX bullet is awesome on fallow.
This Saturday I Shot two at about 160 and another at 240, which ran out across the barley and left a great blood trail.
Did the bullet on the 240 yard animal take bone with it?
 
There is a lot of love for the 243, so now, to turn it on its head.
As the 243 is such a good round, why does anyone need bigger?
Surely if it is good enough for a novice who is shooting fallow, then an experienced gun will not need anything bigger?
 
The 243 is a marmite calibre, we used to have lots of threads on its merits/flaws. It does seem particular about the right bullet and their are lots of reports of good performance with nonlead bullets.

For foxing it may even be better than the CM.
 
Back
Top