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JTknives
09-25-2011, 02:22 AM
Well today I went out with Doug the great white hunter to go get me some antelope. My rifle of choice is my 50 RazorBack which shoots a .510 diamater boolit/bullet. Gun was built by me on a savage 110 action and a turned down 50 BMG barrel on a Mcmillan stock. My load of choice was a 500gr paper patched boolit going around 2300fps. The case is made from 300 REM ultra mag cut off at the neck and expanded. It's topped with a NIKON 2-7x32 scope and is a dream to shoot.

The day started with Doug and I heading to the range to just check the gun for zero and to see how it shot with out the muzzle break. I stand up and chamber a round and gentley squeeze the trigger. The gun goes off and somthing hits me in the leg. I look Down and the recoil was so strong it ripped the bipod off the gun. So I put a few more rounds down range a call it good. We decide to shoot with the break on the barrel as we did not see much if annual change in accuracy. We head back to his house and install a new sling stud and reatatch the bipod and head out.

We are driving for a little while in my area and don't see anything except a few bucks. Then Doug stops the truck as he spots a buck on the hill and there are 2 Dow's . We stop and park the truck and get the guns out. Now the stalk begins as we make our way around the hill and out of there sight. We crest up over the hill and see them at the other end and proceed to crawl closer. We notice there are a bunch of goats there so I just need to pick one. I crawl a little closer and up to a little rock pile and get ready. Doug ranges the goats at like 135 yards. I get set up and scope them out for a bit and pick one that is away from the rest and is facing me. I place my cross hairs in the middle of the neck just a.touch lower then its back. Take a deap breath and let half out and squeeze the trigger. The gun roars and the goat drops, not even a twitch. I rack another round and watch the others. Thy run off about 100 yards and stop. So we wait to see if thy come back. After a while I decided to belly crawl closer as I was not comfortable taking a 230 yard shot with that gun yet as I had never done so and I was not famular with the bullets drop at that range. So I very slowley sneak up and just as I got to about 186 yards thy got spooked and where starting to trot away. I set the rifle and deployied the bipod and picked the one goat that had not started moving away and I held high on the top of the neck which was the head. I know my windage is right on and so holding high I could alow for unknown bullet drop. I pulled the trigger and goats went every where and dust erupted around them. Then a goat jumps up and runs away, I thought o damn I got a runner. So Doug and I get up and walk over to where thy where. And low and behold I stoned the goat I was going for. The boolit hit right behind the ear and exited by the eye or what was left of that side of the face. I did not hit the other goat I just scared the **** out of it and it tripped.

We pull the truck up and start working the first goat. As we are cutting we uncover the wound Chanel. The bullet entered dead center on the neck right where I was aiming. Right behind the neck is what looked like an exit wound as there was a big hole between the sholder blades. We strip all the meat off and start cutting into the back strap and notice a wound Chanel. we fallow it back and find the bullet stopped at the rear of the goat at the hip. The bullet broke every rib on that side of the spine from the neck to the hip. We weighed the bullet and it was like 360gr I think. Not bad for how much bone it went through. The other antelope was easy to spot the wound Chanel and gave us a little more meat because of the head shot.

So now I have a cooler full of meat and a perma grin. I had so much fun and was glad to beable to use a gun I made and a bullet I designed and made the mould for. Here are the pictures, Doug has some more and he can add them if he like. Thy are close-up picture of the wounds. I will take a pic of the boolit we recovered tomarow and post it.

138 YARD neck shot
http://a2.sphotos.ak.fbcdn.net/hphotos-ak-ash4/306308_649158404841_65001739_33279737_711859470_n. jpg


186 YARD head shot. You can see the first antelope I shot in the background.
http://a1.sphotos.ak.fbcdn.net/hphotos-ak-ash4/s720x720/311557_649158454741_65001739_33279738_1525652635_n .jpg

RugerFan
09-25-2011, 03:00 AM
Very nice! How about posting pics of the boolits and cartridges.

dk17hmr
09-25-2011, 09:56 AM
*****GRAPHIC PICS*****
Dont click on them if you dont want to see brains.
Headshot
http://i48.photobucket.com/albums/f208/dk17hmr/IMG_0043.jpg

Exit wound on the neck before it entered the back again.
http://i48.photobucket.com/albums/f208/dk17hmr/IMG_0042.jpg

I need to build a 50 RB after seeing this, it would make an amazing elk rifle.

roverboy
09-26-2011, 10:38 AM
I got a friend at work that would love that thing. He's got "Biggunitus". Its real serious.

DanWalker
09-26-2011, 11:07 AM
Nice work JT!
I always laugh when I see the mighty TV show hunters run their yaps about needing to shoot 400 yards to get an antelope. If a guy is willing to HUNT, it isn't all that difficult to get within 200 yards of just about any critter.
90 percent of our shots on antelope are 200 yards or less.

white eagle
09-26-2011, 12:25 PM
Nice work JT!
I always laugh when I see the mighty TV show hunters run their yaps about needing to shoot 400 yards to get an antelope. If a guy is willing to HUNT, it isn't all that difficult to get within 200 yards of just about any critter.
90 percent of our shots on antelope are 200 yards or less.
ya mean like some joker shooting an antelope at 926 yds
then call it hunting ???

DukeInFlorida
09-26-2011, 01:40 PM
sweet meat! Congrats.

JTknives
09-26-2011, 02:10 PM
thanks guys, it was a very fun hunt.

JeffinNZ
09-26-2011, 05:27 PM
You're taking head and neck shots. You could use a .222 Rem.....still, that would be nowhere near as much fun.

JTknives
09-26-2011, 07:36 PM
here is what loaded rounds look like, the first pic is it loaded with 750gr hornady A-max and the second is 500gr cast paper patched. i took both antelopes with the cast boolits

http://a2.sphotos.ak.fbcdn.net/hphotos-ak-ash4/301922_2392153690252_1443189422_32840086_7579967_n .jpg

http://a5.sphotos.ak.fbcdn.net/hphotos-ak-snc6/215460_2023464953264_1443189422_32396718_1888379_n .jpg

EMC45
09-27-2011, 09:39 AM
I'd say that round hits with authority....

Beerd
09-27-2011, 09:46 AM
I'd say that round hits with authority....

with a 500 grainer started at 2300 '/sec, no kidding :bigsmyl2:
..

dk17hmr
09-27-2011, 02:58 PM
You're taking head and neck shots. You could use a .222 Rem.....still, that would be nowhere near as much fun.

The great state of Wyoming says we have to use at least .24 caliber. If we could use anything I would already have a 22-250AI with the right twist for 75 plus grain bullets just for deer and antelope hunting :)

JeffinNZ
09-27-2011, 05:55 PM
So JT's formula is to take the minimum caliber and multiple it by 2 1/8 to get the caliber he really wants to use. :-)

redneckdan
09-27-2011, 07:31 PM
Something like that. I hear his elk rifle requires a trailer hitch....:kidding:



http://i17.photobucket.com/albums/b77/redneckdan/944-boom-headshot.jpg

Matt_G
09-27-2011, 08:31 PM
The great state of Wyoming says we have to use at least .24 caliber.

It's the same here in Colorado.
Good job guys! [smilie=w:

JTknives
09-27-2011, 09:38 PM
Something like that. I hear his elk rifle requires a trailer hitch....:kidding:



http://i17.photobucket.com/albums/b77/redneckdan/944-boom-headshot.jpg

no trailer hitch required if your a real man, but yes this is my elk gun.

http://a8.sphotos.ak.fbcdn.net/hphotos-ak-snc6/285067_2326263683043_1443189422_32755423_8309988_n .jpg

http://a1.sphotos.ak.fbcdn.net/hphotos-ak-snc6/228875_2337559285426_1443189422_32769154_3626563_n .jpg

smokey496
10-09-2011, 12:10 PM
Nice build and Good shooting.