To me it would be nice to have a gun JUST FOR DEER and since these are legal now, and something new. Seems like a cool idea.
What type of Ammo do you shoot out of them for deer? Grain? Etc?
I'm a old fashion lead bullet shooter myself. I cast my own and a large hole through the vitals will take down a deer just fine. I'm in the old school of bigger and heavy is better.
I've taken 22 deer with 44 mag and 1 with a 45LC all lead bullets. I recovered all 23 deer and only lost one buck when it went onto the neighbors property and he wouldn't let us follow it. I later learned he found and eat the deer so no real lose.
I'll either cast up some 405 gr. flat nose bullets for the 45-70 or use my Ruger auto 44 mag with 310 gr. flat nose cast bullets. When I started hunting pistol deer hunting the 1st yr. Ohio permitted it there wasn't any reliable HP jacketed pistol bullets. But that was over 25 yrs. ago and pistols bullets have come a long way but I see no reason to change something that isn't broke.
As a matter of fact the 44 mag 310 gr. Lee Precision lead bullet was designed by myself and my shooting buddy Dale when I took a 3 week hunting trip to Alaska. I was in brown bear country and wanted a heavy flat hose bullet to carry. I slepted with a loaded Ruger 5" laying beside me for 3 weeks.
I also designed a heavy 45LC mold but got ill and Lee later produced it and still does. I also designed a 357 Mag. 180 gr. flat nose bullet that looks a identical to the 44 mag bullet. But I only got one mold and never put it into production. Lee Precision missed the boat and doesn't see the benefit of heavy cast bullets.
Like I said heavy and bigger is better with a wide flat nose for extreme hitting power. Faster and lighter isn't in my way of thinking. I want a large hole in and a large hole out. The silly thinking of a bullet stopping inside the deer to expand all the bullet energy is just silly. I look at this way if the bullet stopped there is no energy. So where the thought came from is beyond me. IMHO