I'm going to assume that anybody reading or posting in this forum isn't going to be horrified by a pic of a blown-up deer heart. If I'm wrong, mods- delete and accept my apology.
I killed a little 125 pound button buck this morning with my Mini 14 Ranch Rifle, which is a 580 Series with the accuracy improvements. I used a handload with Winchester's bulk 55 grain softpoint; a plain jane, el cheapo bullet. I run it about 2850 fps over H4895 powder in Lake City brass. I am happy with this velocity as it groups well at 200 yards, where the irons are zeroed, and I felt it more likely to give adequate penetration on deer at that speed. It also nearly matches the trajectory of the ‘house’ 30-06 load, which simplifies shooting at distance.
The button was just a meat deer and I shot him at 170 yards per the measuring tool on ‘Google Earth’, which also shows a near-exact 205 yards to my target frame. When I first saw the little booger he was laid up in tall grass and absent a rest, I shot a tad high when I tried to spine him. He then stood up and ran a little ways before showing his shoulder, where I sent the second shot. That one was good and he stumbled off 15 yards and dropped.
The bullet broke the near shoulder, blew a 2 ½”hole in his heart and exited the off-side ribs.
I don’t know what more you could ask of a .223 or a game load in general. I’ve seen a 150 pound doe saunter off 25 yard & jump a 5 strand fence, with her heart blown out by a 30-06.
What I do know is that I need to work on my off-hand rifle shooting. I do hate to miss- even once.
I killed a little 125 pound button buck this morning with my Mini 14 Ranch Rifle, which is a 580 Series with the accuracy improvements. I used a handload with Winchester's bulk 55 grain softpoint; a plain jane, el cheapo bullet. I run it about 2850 fps over H4895 powder in Lake City brass. I am happy with this velocity as it groups well at 200 yards, where the irons are zeroed, and I felt it more likely to give adequate penetration on deer at that speed. It also nearly matches the trajectory of the ‘house’ 30-06 load, which simplifies shooting at distance.
The button was just a meat deer and I shot him at 170 yards per the measuring tool on ‘Google Earth’, which also shows a near-exact 205 yards to my target frame. When I first saw the little booger he was laid up in tall grass and absent a rest, I shot a tad high when I tried to spine him. He then stood up and ran a little ways before showing his shoulder, where I sent the second shot. That one was good and he stumbled off 15 yards and dropped.
The bullet broke the near shoulder, blew a 2 ½”hole in his heart and exited the off-side ribs.
I don’t know what more you could ask of a .223 or a game load in general. I’ve seen a 150 pound doe saunter off 25 yard & jump a 5 strand fence, with her heart blown out by a 30-06.
What I do know is that I need to work on my off-hand rifle shooting. I do hate to miss- even once.