Gravel Road
Well-Known Member
The Precision Hunter ammunition has a speed of 2285fps at 300yds and then you throw centerpunching a rib into the picture and you get what you ended up with. Now, like I said in my earlier post, you can shoot 100 deer in the same spot and end up with 100 different results. I wouldn't give up on the bullet and load based on one deer. There are many people that have done the same thing you did and had perfect results with the bullet. The good thing is, she only went 30yds before dying. Keep in mind, just about any bullet you shoot can and will do exactly what this bullet did at some point in a hunting lifetime. It's when you have it happen over and over that you need to think about changing. Everything about what happened has to be considered, shot distance, bullet design, the animals skeletal density, amount of fat, etc. You could also throw in air temp and altitude if you wanted to get technical. The temp probably played more of a roll than altitude. Cold ammunition can have a slower velocity than warm ammunition(this is why I do load work up in the summer).
I understand that a one time incident and may never happen again. Or, you
You mention the Partition. Ever shot a deer in the same spot with the Partition that you did with the ELD-X? Have you ever shot a deer in the same spot with the Partition that you did the ELD-X out of the 6.5 Creedmoor? Have you shot the Partition out of the 6.5 CM at 300yds and hit a deer in the same spot as the ELD-X did? You really can't say one bullet is better than the other until you shoot it out of that rifle at any and all distances and put the bullet in the same spots and get better results.
The Precision Hunter ammunition has a speed of 2285fps at 300yds and then you throw centerpunching a rib into the picture and you get what you ended up with. Now, like I said in my earlier post, you can shoot 100 deer in the same spot and end up with 100 different results. I wouldn't give up on the bullet and load based on one deer. There are many people that have done the same thing you did and had perfect results with the bullet. The good thing is, she only went 30yds before dying. Keep in mind, just about any bullet you shoot can and will do exactly what this bullet did at some point in a hunting lifetime. It's when you have it happen over and over that you need to think about changing. Everything about what happened has to be considered, shot distance, bullet design, the animals skeletal density, amount of fat, etc. You could also throw in air temp and altitude if you wanted to get technical. The temp probably played more of a roll than altitude. Cold ammunition can have a slower velocity than warm ammunition(this is why I do load work up in the summer).
You mention the Partition. Ever shot a deer in the same spot with the Partition that you did with the ELD-X? Have you ever shot a deer in the same spot with the Partition that you did the ELD-X out of the 6.5 Creedmoor? Have you shot the Partition out of the 6.5 CM at 300yds and hit a deer in the same spot as the ELD-X did? You really can't say one bullet is better than the other until you shoot it out of that rifle at any and all distances and put the bullet in the same spots and get better results.
To make a long story short, I'm not impressed with the bullet performance. Some people like the bullet to stay inside and dump it's energy, and I'm not in that camp. I like a bullet that exits and this bullet did not after hitting small bone. To me it's in the failure column. Would I shoot another deer with it? Sure, but I would be careful in the shot placement. Life's too short to deal with bullets I don't trust, and there are way to many good options out there. I'll probably reload the Nosler 140 LR Accubond or one of the X-bullet variants to get better penetration. If you want to use the ELD-X then go for it. It's not for me. If I can't get a different bullet to perform better for large bucks then I'll drop the 6.5 Creedmoor for a round that I can count on.