oh no said:
You taking about mini-fix from Q or just 300bo in general?
I bought 300bo with a can for hogs and yotes because it's as quiet as you can get- to be courteous to neighbors as well as protect my own hearing, with subsonic ammo leaving the possibility for more effective follow up shots. But alas, I'm a novice, don't know wtf I'm doing and haven't shot a single hog or coyote yet.
I like the idea of harvesting one whitetail per year off my property to stock the freezer out there, but not ready to do so yet- yes- would be within 100yds, considering using a different ammo than sub-x for the 300bo (zeroed at 50yds and confident in accuracy from a rest with the subs), buying a different caliber upper for the ar-15, or just buying a whole new setup on a different platform (ar-10 or bolt action) in 308 or 6.5cm.
I quickly abandoned the use of subs in my 300 blk for hog hunting because of the ballistics. A 220 gr sub will drop almost a foot at 100 yards, maybe more in 7-9" barrels (not sure).
I say this just because you mentioned follow on shots…1) it is a myth (IMO) that hogs won't run using subs because they're so quiet. They still cycle the action of a AR which is well over 100 dba and when you hit a hog it sounds like a baseball bat hitting a watermelon. I've found this to be true even with bolt guns too, minus the action cycling…remaining pigs know something is up. 2) When shooting hogs in groups at close range, they will run fast after the first shot and if you want to shoot a few out of a group, you'll have to lead, often quartering away. Accounting for the lead is hard enough without accounting for bullet drop too.
So, for me, that's why I like 110 gr supers. If you intend to walk around with a lightweight SBR/pistol with a short barrel, 110 gr supers out of a 300 blk have more energy than 556 at similar barrel lengths. Sure there are many better rounds for that first shot, but lugging around an AR10 is tough, then I need sticks, etc.
Just some food for thought for any and all, not just you