For myself and probably most (certainly not all!) ml hunters, the limiting factor is probably going to be shooting ability rather than firearm ability. Some will take exception to this but having witnessed kills on mule deer with mostly .54 caliber round ball guns, I'll say that I have seen a one shot dropped on the spot 180 yard shot with 80 grains of goex ff. OTOH, there have been those 35 yard shots with similar loads that resulted in long tracking sessions and even lost animals. Shot placement was what made the difference and the shooters ability to place that shot
under the existing field conditions was what determined the results.
Shots in the field are
not the same as shots on the range or on a woods walk. Emotions run high when shooting at game (if yours do not, then why are you hunting
). Your physical condition at the moment is very much a determinant on how you will shoot. Are you; Out of breath? Tired from climbing that tree or last thousand feet of vertical gain? Frozen to the bone from sitting on stand? Dehydrated from sitting in the hot sun? Got the shakes from lack of energy having burned every available carb in your muscles and liver?
I'm happy to say that I recently missed a gimme shot on a coyote at a distance at which I could easily keep five shots in five inches offhand on paper. Dang near 64 and can still get so excited that I missed. :haha: I feel sorry for any hunter who is beyond having that experience.
All experienced ml hunters know that when it comes to shooting at over 100 yards, the ability to accurately judge the range is critical as well. A guy who can hold five shots in eight inches at 140 yards (I don't personally know that guy but there are thousands of them on the net :shocked2: :haha: ) can easily muff a shot on a deer by being off 15 yards in estimating the range.
So, for me at least, my maximum range on game is generally well under what I know my gun can kill at.
Just some food for thought.