hi all,
I have my second gopher trip in Montana coming up. The first was great but I definitely brought the wrong hardware. Skip the paragraph to the next to avoid my rambling story. I brought a tc encore .223 and a savage .22lr I built off a cheap savage my wife bought me for our wedding present. Word to the wise...when the wife buys you a gun DO NOT LET HER KNOW YOU ONLY WANTED THE ACTION AND ARE GOING TO SCRAP/SELL THE REST...SHE WILL NOT UNDERSTAND LOL. I went to Montana with some goals in mind. The little 22 or I built I wanted one at 200 yd and the 223 I want one over 350. This is on a farm I deer hunt each year and all shooting is done laying in the dirt off a bipod. My results were great but again...wrong hardware. ENDED UP TAKING ABOUT 250 in the course of two days. Set up in a gopher colony and ranged a mound at 252yds. Settled in behind the .22lr...Checked my range card I calculated in excel and taped to the scope, dialed In The distance and comp for what I judged as a 15mph crosswind, settled in on the head (thinking that may give me some elevation relief if my calcs were off on the range card) on this rifle was a lucid L5 6-25x50 (decent for the money, happy on the 22 but won't buy another) squeezed off the modified factory trigger and down he went. Couldn't believe it. I thought my 200yd goal was a stretch. This was the guns first round in the field and it performed. However any less than perfect head shot left a gopher flopping on the ground in agony, which drove me to put the gun away rather quickly. Although they are a pest for the farmers and their cows, if I'm not putting them out quickly and humanely, I'll adjust. The 350yd on the encore was a bit tougher. Great gun. Even with cheap glass will do sub Moa at 100 with my hand loads. Cheap 3x9 Nikon buck master scope. So ultimately guessing holdover and wind age. Not to mention at that distance the crosshair is bigger than the animals head... Still made the shot eventually. The bigger problem was reloading the rifle on the bipod with the break open action and trying to keep the muzzle out of the dirt. Long story short, wrong hardware.
To fix this problem, I have built myself an ar-15 chambered in .20 practical topped with vortex glass. Gun has patterned easy 1/2 moa. Great shooter. Confident out to 300yds. Now looking to extend the range.
I want something that will get me consistent kills in the 300-600yd ranges.
I have a Remington 700 action that is going to be blue printed. What I'm wondering is what caliber do you suggest to chamber? I was leaning toward a 22br or a 6br. But know there is so much more out there. This will not be a competition gun. Just looking for a deadly gopher/coyote gun. Thinking of mounting in an mdt chassis and springing for night force glass on top. It want this thing to print bug holes on the bench and drop them in the field. What about ppcs, 22 or 6? I've read on them but they state they are best in shorter ranges. I'm wide open on caliber choices here.
Please let me know your thoughts. I'm relatively new to building in this state and looking to learn from those who know more than I!
Thanks!
I have my second gopher trip in Montana coming up. The first was great but I definitely brought the wrong hardware. Skip the paragraph to the next to avoid my rambling story. I brought a tc encore .223 and a savage .22lr I built off a cheap savage my wife bought me for our wedding present. Word to the wise...when the wife buys you a gun DO NOT LET HER KNOW YOU ONLY WANTED THE ACTION AND ARE GOING TO SCRAP/SELL THE REST...SHE WILL NOT UNDERSTAND LOL. I went to Montana with some goals in mind. The little 22 or I built I wanted one at 200 yd and the 223 I want one over 350. This is on a farm I deer hunt each year and all shooting is done laying in the dirt off a bipod. My results were great but again...wrong hardware. ENDED UP TAKING ABOUT 250 in the course of two days. Set up in a gopher colony and ranged a mound at 252yds. Settled in behind the .22lr...Checked my range card I calculated in excel and taped to the scope, dialed In The distance and comp for what I judged as a 15mph crosswind, settled in on the head (thinking that may give me some elevation relief if my calcs were off on the range card) on this rifle was a lucid L5 6-25x50 (decent for the money, happy on the 22 but won't buy another) squeezed off the modified factory trigger and down he went. Couldn't believe it. I thought my 200yd goal was a stretch. This was the guns first round in the field and it performed. However any less than perfect head shot left a gopher flopping on the ground in agony, which drove me to put the gun away rather quickly. Although they are a pest for the farmers and their cows, if I'm not putting them out quickly and humanely, I'll adjust. The 350yd on the encore was a bit tougher. Great gun. Even with cheap glass will do sub Moa at 100 with my hand loads. Cheap 3x9 Nikon buck master scope. So ultimately guessing holdover and wind age. Not to mention at that distance the crosshair is bigger than the animals head... Still made the shot eventually. The bigger problem was reloading the rifle on the bipod with the break open action and trying to keep the muzzle out of the dirt. Long story short, wrong hardware.
To fix this problem, I have built myself an ar-15 chambered in .20 practical topped with vortex glass. Gun has patterned easy 1/2 moa. Great shooter. Confident out to 300yds. Now looking to extend the range.
I want something that will get me consistent kills in the 300-600yd ranges.
I have a Remington 700 action that is going to be blue printed. What I'm wondering is what caliber do you suggest to chamber? I was leaning toward a 22br or a 6br. But know there is so much more out there. This will not be a competition gun. Just looking for a deadly gopher/coyote gun. Thinking of mounting in an mdt chassis and springing for night force glass on top. It want this thing to print bug holes on the bench and drop them in the field. What about ppcs, 22 or 6? I've read on them but they state they are best in shorter ranges. I'm wide open on caliber choices here.
Please let me know your thoughts. I'm relatively new to building in this state and looking to learn from those who know more than I!
Thanks!