I've shot roughly 15-20 deer + a coyote with cheap Winchester power points (100 grain). I've had good expansion, and 100% exits. Additionally, they group fairly well out of my ruger m77. Hard to beat for $18 a box at Walmart.
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100 grain soft points,I repeat soft points.
I just traded into a .243 Win rifle. I'll use it for deer in the woods where a "long" shot will probably be 150 yards. There is only one spot where a 200 yard shot is possible, but that's it. I got it for its accuracy and the fact that it comes already scoped.
So the question is, when I go buying some ammo for it, at the local gun store or sporting goods "big box" store, how do I know what rounds are made for adequate penetration and weight retention on big game, and which rounds are made to expand and even fragment ASAP?
Can I just go by bullet weight? If the bullet is 55-70 grains, it's a varmint round.
If it's 85 to 100 grains, it's a deer round.
Would that be true, and a useful guide for me to have memorized when I go ammo shopping?
I don't want to limit myself to searching for one particular load. The first store I go to, I want to leave with a .243 deer round in hand. I'm not fussy about brand, or even whether the bullet is soft point or polymer-tipped or hollow-point, as long as it will penetrate well, give me a big bloody exit wound for a broadside shot where no shoulder bones are hit, and stabilize in this rifle's 1:9 twist barrel (22" long).
Thanks!