Several weeks ago there was a thread asking if a .50cal PRB was big enough for a high shoulder shot to drop a deer in its tracks. As I recall there was a lot of conjecture against the idea because while the classic “anchor shot” with high powered center fire rifles was indeed the high shoulder shot that we all know, it was said the PRB did not have sufficient shock power to drop a deer as it required 'hydrostatic shock'.
Since getting into hunting with PRBs, I followed the same course I had while bow hunting, which was the time proven heart shot”¦take out the pump and the deer is down in sight...have now done it for years with several different size calibers.
But the claims that high shoulder shots were a poor choice with PRBs made me decide to dedicate the rest of this season to them exclusively, testing various calibers for the hands on experience.
Doe #1
Was an experimental .45cal double PRB load I’d already committed to test with my normal heart shot, I did, she crashed in sight maybe 15yds away”¦the so called loaded-for-bear load worked as expected, .45cal cleaned and back in it's case.
Then I committed to high shoulder shot testing with my normal hunting PRB loads for as long as my season and deer sightings would allow”¦was fortunate to get 5 more chances:
Doe #2 - .62cal, high shoulder shot, dropped dead in her tracks
Doe #3 - .62cal, high shoulder shot, dropped dead in her tracks
Doe #4 - .58cal, high shoulder shot, dropped dead in her tracks
Doe #5 - .54cal, high shoulder shot, dropped dead in her tracks
Doe #6 - .50cal, high shoulder shot, dropped dead in her tracks
The original question was about a .50cal”¦and not only did my .50cal Dickert drop today’s Doe in its tracks with the high shoulder shot, it was a complete pass-through.
What I learned was that a high shoulder shot with a PRB did indeed produce instant results, each and every time, with the .50/.54/.58/.62 calibers I personally tested. And as a result I believe the .45cal would do equally as well.
THE HIGH SHOULDER PRB SHOT PLACEMENT I USED
Through the scapula (shoulder blade) and through the vertebrae that dips / curves down between the shoulder blades, resulting in instant, humane death to the animal.
Since getting into hunting with PRBs, I followed the same course I had while bow hunting, which was the time proven heart shot”¦take out the pump and the deer is down in sight...have now done it for years with several different size calibers.
But the claims that high shoulder shots were a poor choice with PRBs made me decide to dedicate the rest of this season to them exclusively, testing various calibers for the hands on experience.
Doe #1
Was an experimental .45cal double PRB load I’d already committed to test with my normal heart shot, I did, she crashed in sight maybe 15yds away”¦the so called loaded-for-bear load worked as expected, .45cal cleaned and back in it's case.
Then I committed to high shoulder shot testing with my normal hunting PRB loads for as long as my season and deer sightings would allow”¦was fortunate to get 5 more chances:
Doe #2 - .62cal, high shoulder shot, dropped dead in her tracks
Doe #3 - .62cal, high shoulder shot, dropped dead in her tracks
Doe #4 - .58cal, high shoulder shot, dropped dead in her tracks
Doe #5 - .54cal, high shoulder shot, dropped dead in her tracks
Doe #6 - .50cal, high shoulder shot, dropped dead in her tracks
The original question was about a .50cal”¦and not only did my .50cal Dickert drop today’s Doe in its tracks with the high shoulder shot, it was a complete pass-through.
What I learned was that a high shoulder shot with a PRB did indeed produce instant results, each and every time, with the .50/.54/.58/.62 calibers I personally tested. And as a result I believe the .45cal would do equally as well.
THE HIGH SHOULDER PRB SHOT PLACEMENT I USED
Through the scapula (shoulder blade) and through the vertebrae that dips / curves down between the shoulder blades, resulting in instant, humane death to the animal.