If we had the shot well, base of the neck, the animal remains in place.Would cut most of the tiny 10 in half. That is an explosive bullet weight for a .338.
If we had the shot well, base of the neck, the animal remains in place.Would cut most of the tiny 10 in half. That is an explosive bullet weight for a .338.
With respect, that is nonsense. I shoot a .338 a lot. Shoot a 5-10 Kg animal in the neck with a 200 gr bullet from a .338 inside 100 meters (probably closer to 50 meters) and the body will indeed stay in place - but the head will be 30 meters away and the neck will have disintegrated.If we had the shot well, base of the neck, the animal remains in place.
Well certainly if you are hunting for meat. Use a 300 Wby Magnum, .338 Win Mag, whatever and shoot them all in the head.Exactly .... I hunt for meat ... my head is useless. And in case of hunting for the trophy ... I do not think it will be damaged ... but most importantly, death is almost instantaneous.
@JLF - you are simply wrong in your assumptions about these animals. Have you actually seen them? Where do you get the notion they have short necks? A Suni, dik dik, oribi, or blue duiker are extraordinarily delicate animals with not merely small, but tiny proportions - particularly their necks. Most would be decapitated by almost anything bigger than a .22 Hornet. This is not an opinion.For the most part these small animals have very short necks, a shot at the base of the neck, a well placed shot, it will kill the animal instantly. And they could take the memory ...
The Dik Dik weighs no more than 3-5 Kg depending upon subspecies.@JLF - you are simply wrong in your assumptions about these animals. Have you actually seen them? Where do you get the notion they have short necks? A Suni, dik dik, oribi, or blue duiker are extraordinarily delicate animals with not merely small, but tiny proportions - particularly their necks. Most would be decapitated by almost anything bigger than a .22 Hornet. This is not an opinion.
But look, if you want to make the investment to go to Africa and shoot a Suni in the neck with a heavy caliber rifle, by all means do so. I would suggest actually observing the result before making a recommendation.
@JLF: simplemente estás equivocado en tus suposiciones sobre estos animales. ¿Realmente los has visto? ¿De dónde sacas la idea de que tienen cuellos cortos? Un Suni, un dik dik, un oribi o un duiker azul son animales extraordinariamente delicados con proporciones no solo pequeñas, sino también pequeñas, en particular sus cuellos. La mayoría sería decapitada por casi cualquier cosa más grande que un Hornet .22. Esto no es una opinión.
Pero mira, si quieres hacer la inversión para ir a África y dispararle a un Suni en el cuello con un rifle de gran calibre, hazlo. Sugeriría realmente observar el resultado antes de hacer una recomendación.
The Dik Dik weighs no more than 3-5 Kg depending upon subspecies.
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The Suni weighs no more than 4.5 - 5.4 Kg.
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The Oribi is somewhat larger and weighs up to 14 Kg
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So which of these animals has a "thick neck" that would be a great target for a heavy caliber rifle?
The remaining seven. None of these small animals are good candidates for neck shots with a large caliber rifle regardless of bullet type or speed.Maybe I express myself badly or my English is not so good ... I didn't say all of them I said mostly, 7 out of 10 or 6 out of 10 are mostly ... can I explain myself well?
Now I understand. I regret engaging in this dialogue.It depends on who is behind the rifle ....