Fellow Hunters,
Full disclosure, I’ve never shot an elk.
However, I’ve shot about 150 to 200 hoofed critters, including I think 5 Kudu (similar body weight) and at least that many gemsbok (weighing about 500 pounds but very impact resistant, IMO).
Plus, I have seen perhaps 50 hoofed animals being shot by other hunters, via various calibers.
Elk specifically, I have hunted them twice.
Once on Afognak Island (Alaska) and I carried a ..308 with 165 grain Sierra spitzers, in a Springfield M-1A, with 5
round magazine (semi-auto version of the USA M14, with military peep sight).
I didn’t even see an elk but, I bagged 5 blacktail deer, with great authority.
The other time I hunted elk was on horse back, in the Bitteroot Mountains of Idaho, up in the Middle Fork of the Salmon River drainage.
I carried a 7 MM Remington Magnum with 150 gr Remington core-locked semi-spitzer and 6x Leupold.
Again, I never saw an elk but I shot a mule deer, with one shot, very dead with that rifle.
So, one must absolutely take my opinion with a pinch of salt.
That said, today if I was to set out after an elk in various conditions and / or kudu as well, my preference would be:
#1.
The .300 H&H with 180 grain Nosler Partition Spitzer.
#2.
.375 H&H with 235 gr Speer Semi-Spitzer.
#3.
The 7MM Remington Magnum with 160 gr Nosler Partition Spitzer.
#4.
.338 Winchester with 225 gr Nosler Partition Spitzer.
#5.
.35 Whelen with 225 gr Nosler Partition Spitzer.
#6.
.30-06 with 165 gr or 180 gr Nosler Partition Spitzer.
#7.
7x64 or .280 Remington with 160 gr Nosler Partition Spitzer.
In thick woods, there are many other rifles and cartridges I might likely prefer.
For starters, the .348 Winchester with 200 gr flat nose, the.338 with 250 gr round nose soft point and the .30-06 with 220 gr,
also with RNSP also come to mind.
When hunting in open conditions, where shots might reach about 400 paces, I do like the Nosler Partition Spitzer, for thin skinned members of the deer family, up to and including exceptional ones weighing up to 600 - 650 pounds (elk, kudu, etc).
But if hunting conditions indicate shots only out to about 300 paces, then I definitely prefer round nose soft points, such as the old fashioned Hornady RNSP and / or the Remington “Core-Lokt” RNSP.
Again, since I have never shot an elk, my opinion is definitely not the gospel.
It is only one grouchy old geezer’s opinion.
My good old childhood pal, Dale Raisbeck, has shot very dead quite a few Elk in both British Columbia, Canada and Montana USA, via his .338 Winchester with 225 gr spitzers, including Nosler and Remington, cheapass Core-Lokt factory loaded cartridges.
Furthermore, his largest bull was a
huge 6x7 point one in B. Columbia, via his Remington Model 700 ADL, .270 and 130 gr spitzer, of the dreaded “cup and core” type (I have forgotten what brand bullet).
In .270, personally I would choose a 150 gr bullet for elk.
But then again, I would not hunt elk or
any critter weighing near as much as
a bull elk, with a .270 so, there IS that.
And that’s all the news that’s fit to print from one old rifle grump here.
Stay on That Front Sight,
Velo Dog.