These days, purchasing hand-loaded bullets for an Elk Hunt is like looking for a needle in a haystack. The .375 Ruger is a “one rifle for the world” kind of gun, and my Ruger African shoots more accurately than any rifle I own with a broad range of bullets. I don’t have a 300 Win Mag rifle in my safe either, as the .375 covers it well.
Even some veteran hunting folks have a tough time mentally (fear) when they think of the heavy felt recoil from some so-called Magnum rifles, but with a state-of-the-art recoil pad that reduces the recoil up to 50%, they tame well.
It has been established, as a guide, that delivered energy to kill elk be in the neighborhood of 1500 ft-lbs. Here we easily exceed that terminal/delivered energy with the .375 Ruger.
I have two boxes of .375 bullets in my cupboard for hunting elk. I have Nosler 260 grain AccuBond bullets and Speer 235 grain Hot-Core semi-spitzer bullets seen below. I think both are good choices. But is one just a bit better? Sure, I might try some other bullets before my hunt this next fall if they can be purchased, but here is some data on these choices.
Both are sub-MOA accurate at 100 yards. My goal is to harvest a bull elk with ranges near 300 to 400 yards. The 260 grain Nosler AccuBond has a muzzle velocity of 2800+ fps and at 400 yards (7000 ft altitude). Its terminal velocity on elk is 2178 fps and 400 yard energy is 2740 ft-lbs with a 90 degree wind deflection of 17 inches. It drops 16.5 inches with a 250 yard zero.
The Speer 235 grain Hot Core has a muzzle velocity of 3000 fps and at 400 yards its terminal velocity is 2064 fps and 400 yard energy is 2224 ft-lbs with a 90 degree wind deflection of 17 inches. I drops 16.5 inches with a 250 yard zero. Same drop and wind deflection as the Nosler.
The Ballistic data confirms that the Nosler AccuBond has 516 ft-lbs more terminal energy than the Speer bullet. At over 2700 ft-lbs of delivered energy the Nosler will easily open-up and mushroom yet still penetrate likely with a substantial exit wound on a broadside shot. I am a proponent of exit wounds for blood trailing.
Note: I did book an elk hunt and later cancelled after making several calls to many experts and doing a Satellite image review with Google Earth Pro. It was a featureless flat dessert landscape and I wanted more photogenic landscape with hills and trees for the many thousands of dollars it would cost. I’ll keep looking.
Good Hunting!
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Hey Ed. Is there anyway I can get ahold of you to get some intell on the .375 ruger. I killed a dandy bull-last year and was disappointed in my bullet performance. Thanks in advance Doug Krueger
Hi Doug, Yes you can reach me at erhale@comcast.net. Look forward to your story.
Doug, We have not heard back from you on your .375 bullet concerns, however choosing a Partition Style bullet like Nosler has never let me down. I like the AccuBond and well as the Gilding Copper E-Tip but you need to see what shoots best in your rifle. Shorter distances of say 250 yards or less or in timber? I like the versatility of Speer 235 grain Hot-core Semi-spitzers. The Speer’s are great loaded up fast to 3000fps, and great loaded down for deer to 2200fps. Keeping distances in the range of 300 to 400 yards for elk. The problem today is finding loaded ammo or even finding bullets to hand-load. Good Luck and Thank you for your question.