Depends on the loading, and the zeroed range. An 80 grain bullet zeroed at 100 yards will be about 10.2 inches below the line of sight at 300.
Depends on the loading, and the zeroed range. An 80 grain bullet zeroed at 100 yards will be about 10.2 inches below the line of sight at 300.
no- very much a center fire cartridge. It is the .308 cartridge necked down to a smaller (.243) bullet.
I have a remington 243 I shoot the silvertip winchester 95gr or 100gr i am only 13 years old and i killed more deer then i have missed so i recemended a remington 710 model
The .243 is a fantastic deer cartridge. It is easy to shoot and not overpowering. The result is a more accurate shot which is key over any and all calibers you may choose to use. History has proven that the .243 is a hunting favorite.
(it good for whitetail deer with 100grain bullet) (and awsome for varmits with 55 grains bullet )
Do not attempt to use ammunition in a weapon not chambered for it.
Size of the rifle will vary, depending on make/ model. The 30-30 BULLET is larger in diameter and weight than the .243, but has less energy. This is due to a slower bullet.
There is little ballistic difference between the two. The .243 will drop about one inch more at 300yards (between 10 and 11 inches) than the 25-06. However the .243 will have a 10 grain advantage in bullet weight. If you are hunting anything bigger than a prairie dog you might want to go with the .243. Otherwise for general varmiting and target shooting the 25-06 will give you an extremely tiny edge.
243
It is: 508 minus 243 = 265 greater than 243
the bigger the animal the bigger the caliber of rifle and the heavier the bullet i.e deer 150 grain bullet 243 caliber and up moose 30-06 180 grain and up for both