Which 44 mag round for bear?

Ceapea

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This doesn't necessarily need to be a hand load, but it certainly could end up that way.
Soon, I will be traveling (hiking/biking) in Black bear country and I am planning on taking my 4" 629 with me. I have several factory magnum rounds in 240gr JHP and 240gr JSP as well as 180gr JHP. I would think that the 180's are out. I also think that something heavier than 240gr would be better, 300gr or so, maybe. I don't know enough about bears to know if you need expansion, penetration or a combo of both. I tend to think that a combo would be best.

What do you say?

Thanks.
 
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Oh goody, a Bear thread in the reloading section!! They are usually in the Lounge.:)

Just go with someone slower than you.;)

I predict the hard cast lead will be the overall favorite with penetration being key.

I do not hunt and here in S Florida our Black bears are not as big as up North. I would say a 240 LSWC with a H110 or 2400 load.
That's what I brought when we went to Georgia.
 
Oh goody, a Bear thread in the reloading section!! They are usually in the Lounge.:)

Just go with someone slower than you.;)

I predict the hard cast lead will be the overall favorite with penetration being key.

I do not hunt and here in S Florida our Black bears are not as big as up North. I would say a 240 LSWC with a H110 or 2400 load.
That's what I brought when we went to Georgia.

Well, this may end up being a reloading related question depending on how I decide to go, store bought or hand load.
I did a quick check for hunting topics and didn't see one.
On other forums, the "lounge" is for non-gun topics.
Thanks for your input.
 
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i was wondering about the same thing !!!!! im going next week with the kids , they both can out run me..
i think im going to just take a handfull of speed loaders !!!
ive got some homemade 255 gr homemade swedge hp with 21.4 gr. of 296. also 250 gr. hard cast swc/ with gas checks and last is a 270 gr hard cast lyman devestater hp's with gas checks both loads with 2400...
the oldest is taking his .444 and the middle kid was thinking about takeing his bow !!! going to have a long talk with that kid !!!!!!!

they have spotted a few over 450 lbs ... bait is in and getting hit and the weather is looking good !!! cant wait also taking the boat !!! BIG PIKE !!!! YUM !!!!!!

mr mom
 
From all the Bear threads I have read, as I mentioned I think penetration is key. So for factory ammo the heaviest solid you can find. Buffalo Bore makes some "nasty" ammo. I tried some of their +p 38 Spl in a alloy revolver and it was brutal. With what you have I would not feel under-gunned with the 240 JSP.

Heavy .44 Magnum Pistol & Handgun Ammunition
 
Elmer's recommendation was a heavy, hard-cast solid at 1200-1400 fps for penetration to the vitals.
 
Buffalo Bore makes great ammo, their Keith style SWC in .44 spc or mag is a great choice for black bear. Penetration in desired well above expansion, bear are tight knit and have tough skin, with a thick fat layer below, there is a lot for the bullet to get through.
I have a friend who just hit a black bear with his Buick, bear ran off none the worse (after a second), frame was bent on his car. They are not cream puffs.
 
For bear, I wouldn't hesitate using this 260 gr one behind about 11 gr of HS-6...or 19 gr of 2400.

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Myself, I have NO first-hand experience with bears. When I was in PA, I encountered a fellow at the gun club who had been disappointed at a bear's failure to fall over dead when he shot him with 180gr loads. However, he did manage to shoot him six times, and the bear died. I don't know what distance this happened at.

The following was found a while back on www.accuratereloading.com , a somewhat hunting-oriented site despite the name.

JJHACK
one of us

Posted 08 April 2003 19:25


This post was from another web site which I put up a long time ago. I thought it might have some relevence to this topic.

I worked for much of my life in a bear damage management program in Washington state. My job week in and week out seasonally was to provide supplimental feed and to remove problem bears from a 380,000 acre tree farm which was bordered by an enormous wilderness area with a seemingly endless supply of black bears. I am currently the Western editor of bear hunting magazine, and a Professional Hunter in the country of South Africa. This past season in Africa my 19 clients shot and killed 117 big game animals in 8 weeks of hunting. That was just one season!
I mention these things so you realize my experience level with big to "HUGE" game is significant. A person needs a bit of resolution in his experience. One or two animals or even a dozen does not make the averaage guy an expert in all that can happen or go wrong. A real authority in the way bullets perform in living tissue needs to see hundreds of big animals shot to study the results and the reactions. From archery, to shotguns and rifles crossbows, and handguns or Muzzle loaders. I have killed or been involved in the direct harvest of hundreds of bears including Brown and grizzly while guiding in Alaska.

When you read this post which follows Remember I'm not just blowing smoke, I've been there! The .44 magnum with a good load will fold up and kill any black bear alive with ease! I don't know who the fellow was that gave the presentation( a previous post stated a .44 magnum was not enough for a black bear) but my guess is that he is baised in some way against handguns, or has little faith in the average user(most likely). I have shot many dozens if not over a hundred with a 44 magnum and never lost a single one. As far as I'm concerned it's nearly the perfect gun for black bear hunting over bait or for as far as 75 yard shooting, maybe further!

Here is my other post:
I might be able to save you some grief and give you a reliable and proven solution. I have had to kill several hundred bears in my life. Many were not in a very happy mood and quite a few would have had my hide torn off PDQ had it not been they were in a foot snare. My Job as a bear hunting guide and as a wildlife manager for many years gave me insight into some conditions regular folks might only see once in a hundred life-times!

First the .44 magnum is plenty of gun for black bear self defense. Not for brownies or grizzly!

Next we have to consider the difference between hunting bears and stopping or imobilizing bears instantly. There is enough difference between the two that many folks get confused when they talk about the ammunition they are suggesting for the gun your asking about. If I were hunting bears a heavy hard cast bullet would be a fair choice. It leaves two .430 diameter holes and usually enough blood to follow to the trophy. The key part of that phrase is "follow to the trophy" !
You will be following the bear because the heavy hardcast bullets will in every case whistle through at a handgun hunting distance broadside shot. This impact is about the equal to a field tipped arrow. The bear has very little reaction except to hunch up for a brief moment and spring forward running as fast as possible often times covering 100 yards and remaining alive for another 30 seconds to a minute or more. Sometimes requiring a follow up shot.

Now consider the bear who is a threat to you. Broadside is out, and bears do not attack while standing. So you have an animal coming at high speed with his head only inches from the ground. If you shoot at his head while the distance is closing you will hit him in the guts without proper lead. That is not an easy thing to do without significant practice and training. If you have the foresight to concentrate while in a panic and shoot at the ground in front of his head you might make a neck or head shot, feel lucky? If you're using hardcast bullets and miss the spine or brain you're getting hit and knocked silly before you even realize what is going on. It's happened to me so I speak from first hand experience on this.
The heavy hard cast bullets don't disrupt enough tissue to crumple or stall a bear unless a perfect CNS hit is made. The better choice and I say this after trying so many loads and killing so many bears I feel the research is nearly indisputable, is the common 240 grain hollowpoint. I have used many types but having done research with Hornady to develope the XTP bullet in the 80's I feel the XTP is as good as any bullet or better. I have seen nearly every bear hit with a Garrett bullet run a long way unless CNS hits were made. However with a 240 hollowpoint the bears will spin like a top and bite at the wound trying to get the burning "bee" out of there hide. This allows many more shots. I have also seen them fall at impact and roll aound on the ground while bawling their heads off allowing more shots. These bullets rarely exit and tear up so much tissue that the bears really show amazing impact effect when compared to the 300 grain hardcast bullets most folks want for hunting. I would not use a 300 grain hard cast bullet for bears as a first choice. Bears are soft and usually small for such a bullet. Those bullets should be used for really big animals with difficult to break bones like elk moose bison and brown bears. Nothing over 400 pounds really needs bullets with that heavy "zip through" construction that a 300 plus grain hard cast construction offers with the exception of wild hogs which have a very thick heavy gristle plate that can prematurely stop softer hollow point bullets.

The reactions I have seen first hand to dozens if not over 100 bears has given me these feelings, not just a bear here and there with random shot placement. Many of the bears shot while hunting are calm and relaxed, the reaction when they are hit is by a significant margin different then when a bear that is agressive and charging you. When we had bears snared that were hit in the chest with a hardcast bullet they continued to pull on the cable to get at us. When bears were shot with the 220-250 grain hollow points most if not all recoiled back and bit at their wound. They always stopped fighting and realized they had bigger trouble then the human they were attacking. The reaction was much different and very consistant. Consider the difference between hitting a deer with a 375HH solid with 4500 plus FPE and shooting that same deer with a 130 grain soft point from a .270, the bigger bullet hitting the deer will allow him to run quite a distance. The Smaller but very explosive 130 grain bullet with only about 2600 FPE will likely fold up the deer on the spot. This is very much like the 240HP VS the 300HC decision. I for one will always carry 240 grain hollow points in my .44 mag revolver and never worry about having enough stopping power for black bears.



Hope this helps. It convinced me, but you can't prove anything from that, since I knew so little to start with.
 
Make sure to take some salt and pepper, I hear bears like it on their meat! ;)

I read a bear story once where a guy flew into brown bear country to take one with a 44Mag. Long story short, the bear did die, that is, after it killed the guide, pilot and the hunter. It had 6 well placed 44Mag shot in it at the time too and still got all three of them.

Just sayin'

There was a guy here at home that shot a Whitetail doe with a 180gr 44Mag from a 6 1/2" M629, the doe won that one too. Ran off and they never did find it.

If it was me, I would go with nothing lighter than a 240gr and if I could get a really good solid bullet up in the 300gr range, that is what I would have loaded. It would be something with a wide meplat, and out of that 4" barrel, I would load it above SAAMI specs and feel really good about it! 1200 to 1300fps from that 4" barrel, that way, when your hand is gripping it as it travels down the bears throat, if you can get a shot off while it is in there, it may exit and let the blood out of that bruin on both ends! :)

An Elmer Keith design, one of the "640" designs from castboolits.gunloads.com would be my top choices if I just felt I needed to tempt fate! ;)

Have fun and be safe! ;)
 
If the 240gr JSP shoots well for you, it is all you'll need for blackies.
I agree with buck. Of the 3 you listed, that'll get the job done. Stay away from HP loads. You are lookin' to penetrate and break bones. If this ammo doesn't shoot well and you need to try something else, look at the heavy hard cast loads from Buffalo Bore or CorBon.
 
When it comes to hunting bear of any kind, why take half-way measures (like a pistol) that may or may not work. Try either a shotgun (slugs) or a Marlin Guide Gun 45-70 (or similar).
 
When it comes to hunting bear of any kind, why take half-way measures (like a pistol) that may or may not work. Try either a shotgun (slugs) or a Marlin Guide Gun 45-70 (or similar).

Well, I'm not really hunting bear. I really hope to avoid them altogether. I am just planning on hiking/biking in Black Bear territory. It would be easier and more sensible for me to carry my revolver on the bike, than a shotgun. Well, maybe the new Kel-tec shotgun would be an exception...
 
I assume we are talking black bears. I live by the JJHack posts, quoted above: Model 29 Mountain - Topic

Hardcast is fine for hunting, but not for defensive shooting. I load Hornady factory 240 gr XTP. A long barrel just gets in the way for me, so I am either packing a 329NG or Ruger Alaskan. Of course, velocity loss is a concern from the short barrels!

If that velocity loss were to bother me enough, I would just up gun to a Ruger Alaskan in .454, which launches a Hornady 240 gr XTP with more velocity from a little 2.5" barrel, than a 240 gr .44, from a big 7.5" barrel.
 
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I carry a 629 5" both in Griz and Black Bear country. If it's only BB that I'm concerned about, I load 240 grain Nosler JHPs @ 1275 fps.

PS: In Griz country I load 285 grain WFNGC HardCasts @ 1235 fps.
 
I'd avoid hollowpoints for use outdoors against large animals. They expand, which is good for humans (unless the are heavily clothed) or for indoor use where overpenetration could cause a bystander to be harmed.
But for bears, I'd use a hard cast bullet (as others have stated) or a jacketed soft flat point.
A hollowpoint would need to be driven harder to be effective, and might not be able to penetrate the skull.
Hollowpoints might be more effective against internal organs.
 
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I would suggest some bear spray, which has been shown to be more effective in tests, because the bear turns around and runs away, as opposed to the possibility of a charge after being shot. With black bears, the danger is with a sow that has new cubs, when you have gotten between her and hers'. I would suggest doing some research on black bears. They are not typically aggressive or overtly dangerous. On the other hand, bees, snakes, and especially other human beings, pose a much greater threat in my experience. Flapjack.
 
I'm currently getting 1153 fps from a 4" 629 using 19.5 gr. of A2400, with a BTB 250 gr. WFNGC that really weighs closer to 260 grains, I'm probably going to work it up to 20.0 grains to get it closer to 1200 fps.

I recently posted some results with some 18 year old Hercules 2400 in a different thread over here and with it 19.5 grains of H2400 produced 1249 fps...a tad warmer.

I have a BTB 280 gr. WFNGC, that I'm getting 1179 fps, with 17.5 gr. of 18 year old AA9. I've since decided to get some new AA9 and see if I get similar results.

If so almost 1200 fps with a 280 gr. WFNGC should be good.

I'm working towards loads that will give some measure of protection beyond the level of my feet or a sharp stick while in the woods with Black bear, Moose, Bison and Grizz in about that order.

I've read JJ's articles and he makes a good argument for 240 XTP's, good bullets and it sounds to me like he's been there and done that.

However, most if not all other writers that I'm aware of promote the use of hard cast bullets, the idea being that any handgun is less then ideal and one needs to break bones to break an animal down verses the likely hood of an expanding bullet bringing an animal down through massive tissue damage.

Garret (I think) does a better job of explaining this on his website then I can.

My loads worked in my gun and may not in yours so please practice your own due diligence in reloading.
 
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