deye243 wrote:I know quite a few that hunt pigs on a regular basis up north with a 17hmr but they only use the game point 20g load as they have very little to no expansion out to around 70y just bang them in the head
Pighunter wrote:Anything else. I've got no idea why I bought it but here we are.
Bruiser64 wrote:I have the same rifle. It’s a great bunny gun. I have, however, shot a fox with mine and it dropped like a stone. You would want to head shoot a fox though. As someone else has said, the 20 gn hollow point is what you would want to use if you are regularly shooting things bigger than a rabbit. The .17 hmr is noticeably affected by strong winds in my experience. But that’s hardly surprising given its light weight and bc
Pighunter wrote:Bruiser64 wrote:I have the same rifle. It’s a great bunny gun. I have, however, shot a fox with mine and it dropped like a stone. You would want to head shoot a fox though. As someone else has said, the 20 gn hollow point is what you would want to use if you are regularly shooting things bigger than a rabbit. The .17 hmr is noticeably affected by strong winds in my experience. But that’s hardly surprising given its light weight and bc
Yeah I think I'll only ever run the 20gn Hollows. Like most of my rifles it'll probably sit in the safe waiting for the day I go out hunting a pest specifically that it might be required for. As of right now pigs are mostly all I hunt and the .44 gets a work out.
bigpete wrote:I've got photos somewhere of a game point I pulled out of a rabbit showing perfect mushrooming, nothing at all like deye243 is showing. I rate them very highly for use on animals up to fox size.
deye243 wrote:bigpete wrote:I've got photos somewhere of a game point I pulled out of a rabbit showing perfect mushrooming, nothing at all like deye243 is showing. I rate them very highly for use on animals up to fox size.
I have never been able to recover a bullet from a rabbit hit with a 17hmr .
I have always found it intriguing how many people experience different things with the same equipment.
bigpete wrote:deye243 wrote:bigpete wrote:I've got photos somewhere of a game point I pulled out of a rabbit showing perfect mushrooming, nothing at all like deye243 is showing. I rate them very highly for use on animals up to fox size.
I have never been able to recover a bullet from a rabbit hit with a 17hmr .
I have always found it intriguing how many people experience different things with the same equipment.
Went in the head front on and lodged in the hip. Couldn't see which way it was laying. Absolutely perfect mushroom with zero fragmentation. Tbh I think the 17gn ones kill a bit better due to fragmentation but they don't shoot as well in my rifle.
At one point I was shooting rabbits for sale as whole food for pedigree dog owners at $10 a head unskun and ungutted,so it was well worth it
Die Judicii wrote::lol:
If I were you M8,,, I'd be marching quick smart back into that gun shop and be asking "Which one of you smart ass salesmen is the hypnotist ?"
A .17 hmr regardless of how you came to purchase it is/can be an awsome little beastie.
At the height of the last drought I used one regularly on the roos/wallabies that were so starved for food and having the last remnants of life sucked out of them by marble sized ticks to the point that they fell over if they tried to hop away.
Brain shots with the .17hmr ceased their agony intantaneously.
I have since procured a .17 WSM which is just like the hmr, but on steroids.
But all said and done I'd be thinking long and hard about how you were talked into buying the .17 hmr,,,,,,,,,,, at least look into maybe 30 cal or above.
I specialize in hunting dogs and until recently the 22/250 and .223 was my go to caliber,,,,,,,,,, but after having one particular dog taking four ballistic tipped 22/250's in the boiler room before falling over,, I now only use .308 HP's
The average dogs are getting bigger and tougher to knock down.