Categories

HG Ammo

Rifle Button

Inflation Button

___________________________________

FREE SHIPPING - PURCHASE 12 OR MORE BOXES
OF BUFFALO BORE AMMO and
Get FREE SHIPPING!
 
(Retail Orders Only) 

Offer good in Lower 48 States Only

FreeShip180




Sale Item

PREMIUM 7MM REMINGTON MAG SUPERCHARGED LEAD-FREE

SKU: 50D/20
Price:
$92.00
Qty: - +

PREMIUM 7MM REMINGTON MAG SUPERCHARGED LEAD-FREE
140 gr. BARNES TTSX Boat Tail @ 3,350 fps/ME 3,488 ft lbs
20 Round Box
 

ITEM 50D 

 
BUFFALO BORE PREMIUM 7MM REMINGTON MAG. SUPERCHARGED AMMUNITION LEAD-FREE

The 7MM Remington Mag. is a super useful North American big game cartridge. I have a personal bias when it comes to cartridge usefulness/effectiveness which I will discuss here at some length. Many folks believe the 7MM Mag. is a super elk cartridge. I don’t. I’ve killed and seen killed, numerous elk with the mighty 7 and it certainly will kill elk, especially if your ammo selection is proper.

So here’s the deal regarding killing elk with a 7MM mag If your task is to simply kill a meat bull, which is usually a younger/dumber bull of 4 years age or less, the 7 Mag. is very capable, but I have killed close to a hundred bull elk in my life, some of which were older than 15 years. Once a bull reaches about 8 years of age in this steep, hard, cold country, not only will his bones be twice as thick as a young rag-horn bull, but THEY WILL BE FAR DENSER TOO. His skin will be twice as thick, literally. His muscle mass will double a younger bull. He will rarely if ever leave the cover of trees in daylight, so when you do get a shot, it will likely be at a bad angle where you can only see part of the bull in dark timber and require at least a few feet of penetration and a running shot may be the only shot you get!!! Young bulls will go into the open in daylight and they will tend to stand still and eat for a while, but older bulls stay in the heavy forest unless it is night and they NEVER stand stationary while awake, broadside and wait for you to shoot them in the middle of a pretty meadow, like you see in the hunting magazines, so if you are a trophy hunter, you need ammunition that makes a big hole and penetrates deeply for those big tough, smart bulls in heavy cover. We can make the 7 Mag. penetrate deeply through bullet design/choice, but it will never make the size hole of a .308 caliber magnum or a .338 caliber mag. I’ve killed at least 5 dozen bulls with a 340 WBY or a 338 Win. Mag. and the other 4 dozen have been killed with about everything else you can imagine. Additionally, I have guided many dozens of hunters to their bull elk, so I’ve seen many cartridges kill many elk and that has left me with some opinions.

Spare me the complaining emails please on this next part of this discussion as some readers may think it is an unsportsmanlike discussion, but that is likely because they have never done what I am about to describe and don’t understand it…………….Hunting giant old bulls (and many of my bulls have been older/bigger) in dense cover and taking the only shot they normally give, which is some stage of g-o-i-n-g a-w-a-y, requires raking, quartering or straight away shots. I’ve taken several big old bulls with poor shots, but in all honesty, the shots were not poor, because I was using bullets designed to do that job and I was always using a .338 cal., .375 or .458 cal. bullet for that kind of dark timber, moving, bad angle shot. I’ve never lost a bull I shot up the butt, in the hips or the guts, as he was darting through dark timber, with a 338 cal. or larger bullet designed for deep penetration. (Normally Barnes TSX or Nosler Partition bullets) No matter how good the bullet design, I would never shoot an older, tougher, bull up the butt with any 7 Mag. load……..the bullet simply is not big enough to be effective as it needs to be for these circumstances on older bulls. If you are going to use a 7 Mag. for elk hunting, you need to be able to pick your shot precisely and the 7 Mag. will suffice nicely, but you'll not find me hunting giant old bulls in the heavy timber with any 7 Mag. load! Yes, I have and will hunt them in the semi-open country with a 7 Mag. and proper ammo, no problem. 

As of this writing, (02-2018) we are going to (for now) produce four different 7MM Remington Mag. loads and I will write a short tech paper for each load explaining its design and intended uses. I see the 7 Mag. as a fabulous long range deer/sheep/goat/black bear cartridge, that serves the dual purpose of an elk or bull moose cartridge ASSUMING PROPER AMMO. The 7 Mag. ends up wounding a lot of big game animals and here is why……………the typical 140gr. bullet is doing around 3200 fps at the muzzle, so if you fail to choose a tough controlled expansion bullet design, the softer bullets tend to over-expand or rupture and not penetrate deeply enough……..on deer, this is not normally a problem as they are thin bodied and you do not need tons of penetration to kill them, but on big elk, big bear or moose, your 7MM Mag. bullet had better be tough enough to not over expand on those close shots, but still have a soft enough nose to expand on a 500 yard shot when the bullet is going significantly slower.  Hypervelocity cartridges always have bullet design issues on big game…………..


1.  Item 50A -- 175gr. Nosler Partition @ around 3,000 fps
2.  Item 50B -- 160gr. Barnes TSX @ around 3,100 fps
3.  Item 50D -- 140gr. Barnes TTSX @ around 3,350
4.  Item 50E -- 140gr. Nosler Ballistic Tip @ around 3,350 fps


This write-up is in regards, to our item # 50D
, which utilizes the very versatile Barnes TTSX 140gr. bullet. Due to the controlled expansion of the Barnes TTSX bullet, this bullet will penetrate deep enough for shooting large elk or moose, although you’d be well served to stick with broadside shots, not raking shots. On deer sized critters, feel free to take any shot presentation angle as you’ll get enough penetration to kill any 300 lb. +/- critter. This is very close to a do-all load for the 7 MM Remington Mag. You get quite deep penetration, but with a very fast and flat shooting bullet, that recoils less than the typical 160gr. to 175gr. “elk” bullets in 7MM. This bullet will not over expand or disintegrate on very close range shots, not even if big shoulder bones are hit.

Note the below velocities taken from my personal test rifles.

➤ 3,303 fps -- Rifles Inc., 23-inch
➤ 3,275 fps -- Remington 700, 24-inch
➤ 3,228 fps -- Ruger M77, 24-inch
➤ 3,145 fps -- Remington 700, 21.5-inch


Next month, (soon as the weather allows) I start training a somewhat “newbie” woman for
multi-range shooting on all the species we have in these parts of Idaho and Montana. She will be using a custom made lightweight 7MM Rem. Mag. chambered rifle and because it is so versatile and low recoil, this is the load she will be training/practicing with.

Good shooting and God bless.

 

Item 50D - Exterior Ballistics Charts for several Muzzle Velocities

_______________________________

Muzzle Velocity @ 3500 fps for Item 50D

3500


 Muzzle Velocity @ 3400 fps for Item 50D

3400

 
Muzzle Velocity @ 3300 fps for Item 50D

3300 


Muzzle Velocity @ 3200 fps for Item 50D

3200

 

Muzzle Velocity @ 3100 fps for Item 50D

3100

 

Muzzle Velocity @ 3000 fps for Item 50D

3000

 

Muzzle Velocity @ 2900 fps for Item 50D

2900



Muzzle Velocity @ 2800 fps for Item 50D

2800

 

Muzzle Velocity @ 2700 fps for Item 50D

2700



Muzzle Velocity @ 2600 fps for Item 50D

2600



Muzzle Velocity @ 2500 fps for Item 50D

2500



Muzzle Velocity @ 2400 fps for Item 50D

2400



Muzzle Velocity @ 2300 fps for Item 50D

2300



Muzzle Velocity @ 2200 fps for Item 50D

2200



Muzzle Velocity @ 2100 fps for Item 50D

2100



Muzzle Velocity @ 2000 fps for Item 50D

2000



Muzzle Velocity @ 1900 fps for Item 50D

1900

Field Proven rifle and gun ammo. Maximum firepower ammo. Best ammunition for rifles and guns for sale. Buffalo Bore. Strictly big bore. Strictly Business.

Attention!
You must be 18 or older to order ammunition. Ammunition must ship UPS ground. Due to Department of Transportation regulations, we cannot accept returns on Ammunition. Make sure to use the correct ammunition in your gun. Check local laws before ordering.

Greg Denton on 02/01/2024 12:35pm
In four years I%u2019ve killed 3 cow elk with this cartridge. Each elk only required one shot. Longest shot was 420yrds, dropped her where she stood. These rounds aren%u2019t cheap but you get what you pay for.

Add Your Review


Your Name:
Email Address:
Review:
Note: HTML is not translated! Your email address will not be shared with anyone.
Your Rating: 5
Verification:
Your Name:
Your Email:
Friends Name:
Friends Email:
Message:
Verification: