Odds are you are describing a poor choice of bullet, not a caliber issue. Use a Barnes X, Partition, bonded Fusion or the like, and odds are a quick clean kill would have ensued. One of the best MD hunters I know, uses a 220 Swift. Out to 450 or so in MT, has not lost a deer. Multiple 180-190 bucks, I think he's nuts, but he's expert with that rifle. So the caliber is capable, just feed it a stout bullet. That said, I'm not recommending a 22 caliber, only saying if the right bullet is selected, it will work just fine. Seen it numerous time via a 223 out to 225 or so. Avoid varmint bullets...Leave the varmint gun at home. I can tell you from experience that bullet placement doesn't matter with a gun that small. I shot an antelope one time with that caliber but never again. First shot (75 yards) in the chest, follow up shot in the chest from a distance of 8 inches, long slow death for that buck. Never again.
Still have to be careful on bullet choice even over 60gr. They make a 60gr V max for example I wouldn't use. A TSX or Partition of 60gr I wouldn't hesitate to use. I'm in the camp that still prefers a bigger gun for big game though. I love my 264 win mag for antelope with a Berger 140gr bullet in the wind. I wouldn't hesitate to use a 243 or 6mm with a good bullet.Tim is right. Before Wyoming made it legal to shoot a centerfire 22 caliber, i would always hunt in South Dakota with my dad for BlackHills deer. I always would try to use a diferent caliber gun every year just for the sake of shooting deer with various bullets and calibers. One year i took my .223 Savage with a handloaded 53gr Barnes TSX. Velocity was about 3100FPS. We jumped a small basket racked 4 point beside a forest service road, he ran out a ways and turned and gave me a really sharp quartering to shot, was later stepped off at around 50 yards. I shot him in the center of the brisket and the bullet blew out behind the deers left shoulder. When the bullet hit the buck, he dropped his hind end on the ground and flipped over backwards, don;t thik the deer moved more than a foot. I wanted to find the bullet but it went out. I knew i needed a tough bullet, thats why i used a Barnes. If you have to use the 22-250, make sure you use a tough bullet like Tim mentioned specially with the speeds the 22-250 produces. Stay away from ANY varmint bullet or you will likely get the results from above. Oh and here in Wyoming if using a 22 centerfire the bullet HAS to be at least 60gr to be legal, so that should take care of all the varmint bullets.
Agree 100%. About the only non premium .224 pill I know of, not bonded/monolithic/partitioned, that I may let a kid use is the Winchester 64 gr. PP. It's rated for deer.Still have to be careful on bullet choice even over 60gr. They make a 60gr V max for example I wouldn't use. A TSX or Partition of 60gr I wouldn't hesitate to use. I'm in the camp that still prefers a bigger gun for big game though. I love my 264 win mag for antelope with a Berger 140gr bullet in the wind. I wouldn't hesitate to use a 243 or 6mm with a good bullet.
They will all work fine. You could flip a coin, base it on your preference, base it on what other game you may chase, or what other rifles you own. Etc... No wrong answer there or for a number of other calibers. It's a great first world problem to ponder...I've seen people use lighter calibers like the 22-250 and 556/223 on deer, and in my experience choice of bullet and shot placement do become more critical, but it's more than doable. Thanks for the info, gents! I'm torn between a 260, a 280 or something like a 257 roberts...
Go with the .280 then you have an all around western big game caliber.I've seen people use lighter calibers like the 22-250 and 556/223 on deer, and in my experience choice of bullet and shot placement do become more critical, but it's more than doable. Thanks for the info, gents! I'm torn between a 260, a 280 or something like a 257 roberts...