Certainly a valid opinion with traditional cup and core bullets but I will maintain the new class of monolithic bullets, Barnes TSX, Remington E-tip and the better bonded bullets like the Accubond make that difference negligible. This 120 TSX went through 4 feet of Kentucky whitetail, ending under the skin in the left ham, at 120 yards with a starting velocity of 2800 fps from my 7mm-08. It weighed 119.9 grains on recovery. No reason to think it would not have done the same to any other ungulate.
![]()
nice deer by the way, what part of kentucky did you get him in?
the point I was trying to make is even with the good bullets, with a moose its always nice to have more energy. a moose is a really big animal with large bones, thick muscles and a fairly tough hide that likes to absorb energy and make for a narrow overall wound cavity and smaller exit wounds. make a bad shot or have a quartering shot and you may not get a pass through even with a bigger gun. a .308 will kill it every time, you just may have a harder time tracking the animal or getting a quick kill. the .308 is a great round and an amazing medium game round, but a bull moose can weigh over 1,000 pounds easily, thats a lot of ungulate to punch a hole through