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Thread: .44/.45’s: Hunting At The Lower End

  1. #1
    Boolit Master
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    .44/.45’s: Hunting At The Lower End

    I’d like to hear of those who load and hunt with .44’s or .45’s using a more standard weight (180-255 grns) where their loads are producing no more than say 550 ft/lbs, especially something along the lines of the .44 Spl or standard .45 ACP/Schoefield/Colt.

    I’d also like to hear from those with experience using softer lead (5-9 BHN).

    Expansion, penetration, and wound channels.

  2. #2
    Boolit Grand Master

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    44 special and 45 colt have been getting it done for years. Depending on your game and range, you would most likely do just fine. Shot placement is key. I’m in GA and could easily take a deer within my iron sight range with either.

  3. #3
    Boolit Master
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    Ive taken several deer with a 45 colt. Different 245/255 gr boolits and some jacketed bullets. All pushed to 900 to 1050 fps. After several deer I knew what I might expect after the shot.

    My big eye opener was in taking 2 deer with my 58 Rem cap and ball. Using the Lee 452-200 RF and all the FFFg I could get in the chamber. These ran right at 700 fps over my chrony.

    2 deer are not a good test but these acted( distance traveled after the shot ) pretty much the same as they would with the heavier loads. Shot placement means everything.

    If you put one of these low powered loads through both lungs there may not be a very good blood trail but it won't be very long. 30 to 70 yds is common. CNS hits are down right there but may get back up. If a deer drops in its tracks I shoot it again. Twice Ive had them jump to their feet at the second shot but didn't go but a few yards before piling up for good.

    Edit
    In rereading you post you asked about wound channels, expansion etc. I shoot the same alloy in everything bhn 10 but the 58 Rem. It gets pure lead. The one boolit I recovered from the 58 had hit quite a bit of bone. I didn't measure or weigh it but believe I could have loaded it back in the gun and shot it again.

    I generally use a cup type HP in my heavier loads but wouldn't with the low powered ones. I fear penatration may suffer. With the heavy loads they generally exit with a better blood trail but they still go about as far.
    Last edited by Wolfer; 09-09-2018 at 09:06 PM.
    Some people live and learn but I mostly just live

  4. #4
    Boolit Buddy kingrj's Avatar
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    Not much data but I have taken 3 deer with a .45 ACP loaded to super velocities that duplicate normal .45 Colt loads..All three fell within 25 yards or dropped on the spot..I chose to add a follow up shot on all three...this was the same result that I have had using heavy .45 Colt loads in the 1300 fps range with 255 grain cast bullets...Big fat bullet that gets inside and hits vital organs kills the deer...Penetration is the key with most handguns used in hunting..I have had complete failures using a lightly constructed 200 gr. hollowpoint in the .44 mag loaded to well over 1500 fps...

  5. #5
    Boolit Grand Master Harter66's Avatar
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    I shot some hogs 135-165# with a 454424 both an original Lyman round groove and the NOE version . Cast 50/50 WW/1-20 at 890 fps in a 45 Colts carbine .
    17 yd hit a heavy rib going in exited through the meat just above the elbow it cut about a .700 hole in the exit shield , 24" . The 165# boar was juiced up on a full run , double lung , 200 yd found lung bled out .

    47 yd 12" through , half inch exit hole in the offside shield , double lung , heart clipped , staggered around half turn dropped in a heap .

    Powder burn , literally feet (6-10?) , 36" through , entered right shoulder/chest cutting 2 ribs , about and inch missing out of the 2nd rib , it cut a half inch skin hole the left flank and ham tend to suggest a 3/4" or more hole . This little piggy at 135# went down in a heap feet to the compass points .

    None of the bullets were recovered .
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  6. #6
    Boolit Mold
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    I took a couple of deer here in SC and Ga last year using a 45 Colt. Deer went less than 20 yards. With lube, mine were 260 gr.

  7. #7
    Boolit Master
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    If you're getting good hits & good penetration with either the 44 or the 45 you will be just fine. I've been using both for about 50 years & big bullets with a good, wide meplat does a fine job on about any game animal. If you shoot really soft alloy's like 5 BHN then you will have to use a gas check or shoot really slow loads or you will have severe leading pretty fast. Moving up to 8-10 BHN & powder coating will make a huge difference in what you can do with hand gun bullets.
    If you're going to use light weight HP's & try to run them at high speed you are going to run into trouble in a hurry if you're shooting deer, hogs, antelope, etc. You have slow that bullet down & give it a chance to penetrate or it's doomed from the start.
    In the last month I've taken 3 deer & 1 antelope with 4 different revolvers & 4 different bullets & velocities. Two were with HP's but I ran them at a speed where they would expand & penetrate. One was a 327 magnum & a 135 gr HP. The shot was 73 yds & broke a rib going in, took out both lungs & broke a rib going out. If I over run that HP bullet it will fail. The other HP was a 217 gr 45 caliber SWC style with a wide HP. This was from my old model shorty & was running 965 fps. I shot the doe at 61 yds behind the last rib, nicked the spine & hit the lungs, dropping her where she stood, perfect performance because I didn't over drive the HP.
    The other 2 were with a different 45 & a 260 Keith solid & with my Bisley 41 magnum & a 230 gr solid, both one shot kills. Hit them right with good bullets & eat backstraps.

    Dick

  8. #8
    Boolit Grand Master In Remembrance
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    Makes me wonder how a .45 ACP 230 grain TC cast bullet would do; I'd pick a 10" or 14" barreled Contender in 45 Colt over that though, with a 255 grain or so cast in it, seems more humane and effective.

  9. #9
    Boolit Buddy
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    Quote Originally Posted by sixshot View Post
    If you're getting good hits & good penetration with either the 44 or the 45 you will be just fine.

    Dick
    +1 with Sixshot's post. That is the beauty of a cast boolit. . .penetration! The ability to get into the boiler room and get the job done at modest velocities. Using a accurate bullet with a wide meplate (min. 65%/70% bullet dia.) ensures a wider wound channel, massive internal damage and most times a nasty exit hole for better blood trailing. 44 and 45 caliber slugs are already a decent size hole to work with as they are. . .just get it there (accuracy) and let the boolit do the rest.

  10. #10
    Boolit Grand Master
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    +1 w/ sixshot. an added notation about big meplat solids, is that they tend to track straight through the animal. it's been my experience, at least.

  11. #11
    Boolit Buddy
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    Quote Originally Posted by Mr_Sheesh View Post
    Makes me wonder how a .45 ACP 230 grain TC cast bullet would do; I'd pick a 10" or 14" barreled Contender in 45 Colt over that though, with a 255 grain or so cast in it, seems more humane and effective.
    The truncated cone has a narrow meplat. WFN boolits make large long wound channels.
    luvtn

  12. #12
    Boolit Master

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    I have killed several deer with a 230gr XTP out of a glock 21 running about 875fps.
    Ill keep my guns money and freedom you keep the CHANGE!!!

  13. #13
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    i've used 250gr keith,hp and penta hp and 280gr wfn gc. they were 40:1, 30:1, 16:1 and 10:1. every deer was thru and thru and they were going 800-1000fps. the furthest i had to shoot was 51 yards and the closest was 3 yards. i never hit the shoulder, just lungs. i've been using 44 spl and 250gr penta hp(40:1) and 7.5gr of unique that go thru ruger sbh(5.5" barrel). i don't think i have shot a 44mag for about 2 or 3 years.

    oh, and the furthest i had track one was 20+/- yards.

  14. #14
    Boolit Master
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    Actually I am loading 2 various black powder revolvers. At the moment I have a mold for a 170 and a 195 grn WFN bullet I designed with Accurate, but intend on modifying the design to lengthen it a bit to help fill up the slack in the chambers.

    I sent some bullets to a fellow with the same guns and powders and asked if while he was testing them if he’d run a few over his chrony using my more accurate powder charges. Using Triple 7 powder (3F) and my 195 grn bullet showed an average of 1002 fps. I actually assumed it would have been a bit faster as I’ve estimated what I was producing by the few other similar results posted online. Really thought I was getting +/- 500 ft/lbs with my Ruger and likely low 400’s with my Remington. And it could be his charges were a bit off or that the powder wasn’t up to snuff as some claim it loses potency over time once opened.

    I’ve had fill issues with my bullets and figured I’d likely try 2% tin from Rotometals. I’d prefer to stay within 10 BHN as it shouldn’t be too stressful on the loading levers but I also like the idea of them being able to expand a little.

    As an aside I’ve also contemplated a shallow HP version. I’ve seen how similar bullets, but a bit heavier (240 grns), have easily penetrated nose to tail through an adult hog, and I’ve read of the same sort of thing with non/little expanding lead bullets from the .44 Spl and .45 Colt. Don’t always want or need 24+” of penetration. Not to mention an ever wider wound channel might be just great. Quite frankly I’ve seen 24” of penetration in gel using just a lowly 140 grn lead ball.

  15. #15
    Boolit Master

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    I've mentioned it many times, but I think penetration is not something you need to be slightly concerned with regarding solid lead bullets. I've gotten nine milk jugs worth of penetration out of a 230 grain LBT with a .32" meplat travelling at the standard GI hardball speed of 830 fps. My own unofficial matrix equates that to a solid yard of gelatin, FWIW. Had the same result with a 130 grain WFN .32 at 1250fps. Both of those were a water-quenched wheel weight mix north of 20 BHN, and there was almost no deformation on either slug.

    With the same load in the .32 and the alloy changed to 20-1, penetration dropped to four jugs - which I'd probably unofficially equate to about 16" of gelatin. Had the same result with a .38-40 rifle load using a 180 grain WFN at about 1350fps. Pleasant little mushrooms in both cases

    My own inclination would be to choose a fairly aggressive meplat, load for accuracy and comfort, and not worry about expansion unless you're in an area with some weird legal requirement for it to do so. Pass through penetration is easy to achieve with non-expanding alloys, and that will give you consistent, predictable results. Expansion can be dependent on what tissues are hit and speed at impact, so there's a little more voodoo to contend with. Probably not likely to expand reliably at the BP handgun speeds you're dealing with anyway. Having seen deer take solid boiler room hits from HOT .45-70 hard alloy solids, and FAST Barnes TTSX's from .280 and .30-06, my experience suggests you're usually looking at about 10 seconds from impact to collapse regardless of what you shoot them with, and foot-pounds don't really mean much - remember the impact is no more "push" than you feel in recoil. You'll see a wound channel that's about as wide as your bullet - drive that through something important, and you've got your freezer-fillins.

    Easy to overthink. It's worth remembering that the standard 1870's & '80's carbine & pistol rounds loading killed A LOT of game (and people) before the likes of Roy Weatherby convinced us they couldn't.
    WWJMBD?

    In the Land of Oz, we cast with wheel weight and 2% Tin, Man.

  16. #16
    Boolit Grand Master GhostHawk's Avatar
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    ^ Applause!

  17. #17
    Boolit Grand Master In Remembrance
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    For deer country you could use a different boolit than your standard ones, set up to shoot same POI etc. and with a larger meplat, loaded by hand into the chamber on a 1911; Mine works perfectly with TC or RN, cast or lead bullets, but I wouldn't want to try a 45 Colt style bullet with a larger meplat in the magazine really.

  18. #18
    Boolit Master
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    These are the revolvers in question:

    upload pic

    And these are the projectiles I have molds for:



    The ball is 0.457” in diameter. The 195 grn version is 0.460” long and the 170 grn version is just 0.400” long. The 285 grn version is modified and was intended for my Ruger (built from modern gun steel which can handle smokeless pressures) when I thought we’d be moving to Virginia putting black bears on the menu.

    But I’d prefer a universal bullet for these and have been searching to find out if there is meat enough in the chambers of the Remington to bore a bit deeper to help match the excess space in my Ruger as I’d prefer these bullets to come close to the chamber mouths.

    I’ve read of far too many people effectively and ethically using cast bullets (even RN designs and ones with a small meplat) with lower velocity loads. However one fellow, who claims to have a hill’s worth of animals all taken by pistols, claims these just aren’t effective, especially with a ball. However I’ve talked with plenty of people who use nothing but a ball who claim otherwise.

  19. #19
    Boolit Grand Master In Remembrance
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    Aah, those aren't autoloaders LOL - Fun though! Is some sort of Minie ball possible for those?

  20. #20
    Boolit Buddy
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    Rodwha - That stainless Ruger Old Army in either .44 or .45 has been on my hit list for years. . .just haven't found a nice one in my price range yet. Very nice pistol, very accurate too. An old friend of mine has one and allows me to tinker with it at my leisure. . .he just won't sell it to me, but says it is in his Will to be left to me and that's not how I want it. Good luck with you project and keep us posted.

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BP Bronze Point IMR Improved Military Rifle PTD Pointed
BR Bench Rest M Magnum RN Round Nose
BT Boat Tail PL Power-Lokt SP Soft Point
C Compressed Charge PR Primer SPCL Soft Point "Core-Lokt"
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LRN Lead Round Nose LWC Lead Wad Cutter LSWC Lead Semi Wad Cutter
GC Gas Check