.243 for whitetail

BoogieMan

New member
My son inherited a .243 bolt gun from my FIL. Planning on using it this year on MO whitetail. Mostly old growth woods and pasture that he hunts with shots up to about 200yds. We have always been 30-06 family so I dont know where to start with a good factory cartridge. Thinking 100gr ish soft point. Maybe the Hornady Whitetail series
 
Last edited:
I'm not aware of any 15gr 0ish bullet for .243 Winchester.
I've used Winchester 100 gr Power Point and Remington 100gr Lok-Core with good success on hogs and I'm sure they'll work well on deer too.
 
A 243 with good 85-105 gr bullets will put deer down every bit as good as the 30-06's you've been using. Not rocket science here. Find a load that is accurate and go kill a deer.
 
Whatever 100-grain (+/- 5 grains) gives good groups will quite well in a .243.

I use handloads with the Sierra 85-grain HPBT, although that load is now available from Hornady. It's a rather "blow-up" bullet, so I've limited myself to neck shots or cross-body heart/lung shots. No angling shots.

I've tagged a couple of dozen bucks with that load. Found 'em where I shot 'em. :)
 
The .243 will work very well on whitetail deer. My bullet of choice is the 100 gr. Nosler Partition. It has worked very well for me.
 
I'm a big fan of Barnes bullets for hunting. If you are too their Vor-tx line offers an 80 grain TTSX for that cartridge. I used those bullets in my reloads for my 243 Winchester and they were extremely accurate.
 
Easy on the shoulder , flat shooting , a variety of great ammo to choose from for varmints to medium game......what's not to like ? :)
 
Well .243 is good for deer. 100 grain bullets are a rather good thing to use. Its what i use. I havent taken a long shot with them, but work on accuracy if you plan to allow that youngin to take full advantage of those long open plots of land youll get to hunt on.

at that range, you dont have the same amount of wiggle room you would with a .308 or even 30-30
 
I'd give a "second" on Tango1Niner's recommendation.
100 gr Nosler Partition is the best all around .243 bullet made.
 
I found that my rem 700 likes 100gr federal power shoks the best. my older brother swears by 100gr remington corelokts.

if your family reloads you might try nosler partitions or speer deep curls.
 
I reload, just not for 243. I noticed limited availability of cartridges online. So it may be less about what I want and more about whats available. I will look for something using 100gr noslers and settle for whatever I can find.
Like I said we have always used a 30-06 with 165 Sierra GK BT and the son who has the .243 was using a 30-30 with 160 leverelution Hornady.
 
My son's rifle loves federal premium 95gr ballistic tips. His first doe dropped in her tracks at 110 yards. Awesome little round.
 
If you are not a hand loader, just buy any 100 grain .243 commercial load and go hunting. None of them are bad, in that they all kill deer effectively. The superior and mystical capabilities of premium bullets exists only in the minds of the easily misled.
 
Great Whitetail round. I agree with what the others have said. If you reload, it is a really flexible round.
 
Couple of year ago, the Michigan United Conservation Clubs,

on their TV show, ran a Jr. deer hunt, 12 yr. old used a .243 on about a 150lb., buck at 125yed from a elevated stand, hit the deer and FLIPPED it backwards with one shot.
 
When I use to hunt with a 243. First time out with the rife I put 4 rounds thu a deer's neck using 100 gr Federals at that time. One finally thur it ribs as it was running away from me out of frustration. Told a friend what happen as He was instrumental in my buying the rifle. He also was reloading 243 & 6mm a few years before me also. My friend at that time told me. Don't bother reloading any weights or brands besides the Hornady 75 HP or the Speer 80 gr SP. From that early 80s deer season to the the day I bought my 270 Rem Mtn rifle that is all I've ever reloaded and used in my 243. Never lost a deer or had to go much more than 50 yards to recover any deer shot with either of those two bullets. Most didn't go 50 ft. even. Only once did a deer struggle to walk those 50 yards. After being field dressed that MN buck weighed 246 lbs. two hour later at a local grainery and seed store. One thing I regret doing at the time of my 243s purchase. I traded a super clean Savage 99E 250-3000 even up for that Ruger 77 with its /saftey mounted on the pistol grip. Live & learn.

S/S
 
+1 to dahermit. Find a 90-100 grain soft point or polymer tip hunting bullet it likes and shoot it! Lots of good recommendations given, but I'd be leery of hollow points... Those are more for varmint duty, which the .243 also handles very well.
 
The largest muley that I ever downed was taken with .243 and Winchester Power Point ammo. One shot through the chest at approx 150 yards toppled this heavy bodied animal. .243 is a keeper!

Jack
 
Back
Top