That is going to vary based on what kind of "300" you are using, what the type and weight of the bullet is, what your initial velocity is, and at what distance you are sighted in for your far zero.
1.5 inches
Depends on the loading, and the zeroed range. An 80 grain bullet zeroed at 100 yards will be about 10.2 inches below the line of sight at 300.
If the rifle is sighted in at 100 yards, at 300 yds the bullet will drop 24-25 inches below the aiming point.
If you shoot 150 Grain @ 2800 fps it will drop -10.8 inches if sighted zero at 100 yards.
Depends on the loading, and the zeroed range. An 80 grain bullet zeroed at 100 yards will be about 10.2 inches below the line of sight at 300.
300 yards A pistol bullet can travel much further than 300 yards. On average, a pistol bullet can travel about a mile.
16 Inches
it is 300-400 yards. AK74 is 500 yards
Depends on the velocity, shape of the bullet, and where the rifle is zeroed. For the standard .223 zeroed at 200 yards, bullet will be 1.4 inches HIGH at 100 yds, on target at 200, 7.2 inches LOW at 300, 22.3 inches LOW at 400, etc.
Yes, The .300 win mag is an extremley flat shooting firearm without bullet drop out to 300 or 400 yards depending on the bullet. But with my experience i went hunting in Zimbabwe africa, and shot a cape buffalo at 578 yards with a 165 gr federal nosler parttiton so to answer your question yes! It is a extremley deadly caliber and can take most game on the planet except the white elephant...
300 yards = 274.32 metres
Legends have it at 100 yards. <><><> Depends on how you define "accuracy". Mine is quite accurate to about 200 yards. Beyond that the significant bullet drop is a challenge. With a well made rifle, a skilled marksman could hit a target the size of a man at 300-400 yards.