This ^^^^A lot of guys are taking elk with a 6.5. You’re fine with your 6.5 Creedmoor. Friend and I have about 5 elk with a 7mm-08. I’ve also shot and lost an elk with a 300 Weatherby. Placement is much more important than whatever cartridge you choose.
. I’ve alway thought 1000ftlb for deer and 1500ftlb for moose or elk but hey ho each to there own.Foot lbs doesn’t actually tell how well a bullet kills. A good bullet above minimum expansion velocity is a better recommendation. Again guys are killing elk as far as a 140-147 gr eldm bullet is above 1800fps.
It kills well. Whether we agree with shooting that far is another thing.
If the elk you are referring to are the Rocky Mountain species here in the USA, I shot 2 with a .30/06 and 1 with a .308 Win. All were healthy sized bulls and none required more than one shot. Shots were between 175 and 225 yards. This admittedly limited experience has shown me that a well-placed, well-constructed .308 caliber bullet at non-magnum velocity and at reasonable distance can take these elk with ease. As stated earlier in the thread, shot placement is most important.Hello,
Does anyone have a good suggestion for a caliber to use on a large elk in Canada for 400 yards out?. I was thinking a 6.5 but concerned this might not offer a clean kill and may end up causing the animal to flee inured?.
Some are still using that but there seems to be a shift, at least in the circles I’m familiar with, that is looking more at how the bullet kills, ie wound channel.. I’ve alway thought 1000ftlb for deer and 1500ftlb for moose or elk but hey ho each to there own.
I know a few folk who think they need a magnum for red deer… mostly they haven’t shot many deer. I’ve shot the odd stag at 400yds with my little 6.5 and they died just fine although I’m sure they would have been much deader with a 338 lapau mag?Personally I don't like to be under gunned, I shot some pretty big red stags in Scotland for over 20 years with a .338 win mag, I never had to chase after a wounded animal or be required to give it a second shot irrespective of distance. I believe that the choice of bullet and loading is more important than the caliber. If was going on this trip for large Canadian Elk at 400 yards it would either be a .300 Win Mag or .338 win mag for me. Even more important would be the practice and understanding how my rifle performs at different distances. Bullet placement remains the most important thing.
We are not talking about punching holes in paper, we are talking about shooting a large animal at a fair distance, let's give the animal the respect it deserves and shoot it with enough gun that is going to kill it effectively. I've got nothing against the 6.5 but it would not be my personal choice for the mentioned task.
Pretty much standard issue for Elk around here . Any of the above cartridges will cleanly kill an Elk , having the ability to put a bullet in the right place out to 400 yards is the issue . A good rifle and a lot of practice will make it possible however . I've seen a number of Elk killed with a lot of different cartridges , from 6.5x55 to 375 H&H . The only time I've seen a problem was down to bullet construction/placement . For many years the 7mmRM was very popular for open country Elk , it's still my favourite belted cartridge . There are a number of other cartridges with very similiar performance . To the OP , I'm a fan of 6.5 cartridges , you don't mention which one , but it is at the lower end of the spectrum IMHO . Elk are large animals and fairly tough , a 6.5x55 or 6.5 Creedmoor will cleanly take a Bull under normal hunting ranges , 400 yards is a long poke though . Good luck on your hunt and be sure to post some pics .I have shot 2 bull Elk, both with a 30-06 180 grain nosier partition, it worked.