cobb wrote:I have taken a few deer with a 1974 vintage 1895 Marlin 45-70 with both factory and handloads, all worked very well. I have taken a few deer in my life with several other calibers, the 45-70 will definitely get the and job done and with a lot less blood shot meat than a 7mm mag, 270 or even the light weight 243. The big bullet gets it done and you take home the meat, the fast and small will will result in more meat loss, the term "blood shot" came from these.
So I would suggest that if you want to get a rifle chambered in 45-70, do it, the deer, bear or hogs will never know the difference.
But then what do I know, my preferred deer round is a .35 Whelen, but I have yet had a game animal complain.
What happens in the basement stays in the basement.
Shipyard wrote:no kidding. that guy gets banned from here more than i quit this place
Shipyard wrote:it's going to be a slower round, - if they're runnin aim in front and you'll hit the hindquarters. for the weight of the gun and the recoil you get, you may as well be using a 12 gauge magnum slug. boo!![]()
too big, slow and will punch a baseball size hole in the other side. i've seen a few guys bring back deer they shot with a 45-70 and they lost a whole freakin quarter out of the thing on the exit side. really does a number on soft skin game...
in my opinion there are way better choices for deer hunting. if it's just MN, i'd actually reccomend a 30-30 or 35 Rem. the 336 platform is a beautiful MN brush gun. if you hunt Wi too i'd reccomend a 270/30-06, something with a little more punch and distance to it.
my $0.02
What happens in the basement stays in the basement.
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