JRS said:
BigDMT said:
Sounds like Mr. Towsley needs to learn how to shoot so he can hit the kill zone
Coyotes can't get away from a 17 HMR if the shot is placed correctly and within reasonable distances of it's capability.
Shot a good size Red Fox with a 17HMR at 125 yards once. Placed it right between the eyes, and with one shot, he was dead before he hit the ground

No way is a 223 too light for coyotes, but a 22-250 is definitely better for long range work on them.
I read nothing in the quote that says the 223 is too light. The quote says he believes its on the ragged edge.
Yes and one has to read the whole article to get the whole gist of it, Bryce actually said he has hunted more with the .223 then any other cartridge, the name of the article was not" black riflesand brown dogs" it actually is titled
" The Best AR-15 Calibers For Predator Hunting" and it discusses several calibers, good article as per usual with Mr. Towsley.
Wayne.
P.s here is just the part about the .223,...
.223 Remington
Everybody thinks this is the cartridge Eugene Stoner had in mind when he developed the AR design, but it’s not. He first developed the rifle in the 1950s for the .308 Winchester and called it the AR-10. He thought it would be the next U.S. battle rifle, but the military picked the M-14 instead.
Soon enough the military wanted to move in a different direction with smaller ammo, so he reduced the dimensions on the gun to work with the 5.56X45mm cartridge and called that rifle the AR-15. The military adopted it, named the cartridge the 5.56 NATO and well, as they say the rest is history.
Remington brought out a commercial version of the cartridge, named the .223 Remington. The two are not interchangeable. A rifle chambered for 5.56 NATO can use .223 ammunition, but a rifle chambered for .223 Remington should not be fired with 5.56 NATO ammo. It will chamber and fire, but it is not safe. So check the stamp on the barrel of your AR to see which chamber you have.
The .223 Remington is one of the most popular centerfire cartridges on the face of the earth and is certainly the most popular choice for coyote hunters using ARs. It’s also the one that gives me the most trouble. I have had more coyotes that were hit with a .223 run off than with any other cartridge. Why? With small bullets velocity is very important to instantaneous kills on coyotes. The .223 is right on the ragged edge of “not enough†to start with, and with the shorter barrels favored on ARs the velocity drops even more.
[size=10pt]To be fair, I hunt more with a .223 than all the other cartridges combined, so some of it is simply playing the odds. But not all of it. The [size=10pt][size=12pt]fix?[/size] Pick a longer barrel to maximize its velocity. Then choose high-velocty ammo with good bullets[/size][/size].
During a recent hunt in Oklahoma I used Hornady Superformance ammo with a 52-grain V-Max bullet at a catalog velocity of 3465 fps. I chronographed this load in an AR with a 20-inch barrel and the bullet was moving at 3333 fps: still screaming. Superformance ammo uses a blend of progressive burning powders that is formulated to the cartridge and bullet weight to extract the most velocity possible. I have tested Superformance in a wide range of rifles and cartridges and it is always extremely accurate. This .223 load has averaged sub-MOA in every rifle I have tested, and the V-Max is one of the best varmint bullets ever made.