308: Is It Making a Comeback??

grfox92

WKR
Joined
Mar 14, 2017
Messages
2,770
Location
NW WY
Alot of mention of 308s being good chopped down and suppresses.

Does it do substantially better then other calibers when cut down? Not loose the same ratio of speed per inch cut? What am I missing?

Sent from my SM-G990U using Tapatalk
 

BarCO

Lil-Rokslider
Classified Approved
Joined
Jan 6, 2023
Messages
299
It was never gone. I have a .308 .270 and 6.5 prc, all local stores have plenty of ammo on the shelves.
 

CCH

WKR
Joined
Mar 10, 2017
Messages
450
Location
Colorado
It never left and will be around long after many of the flavor of the month cartridges have enjoyed their time in the sun. I won't go back to the Weatherby days of ultra high velocity cartridges that were then emulated by the mainstream manufacturers, although we did get some pretty good and long lasting rounds out of that like the .300 WM, .338 WM and 7mm Rem Mag.

In more recent years (relatively speaking), we had the extra long action (.375/8mm Rem Mag length) magnum craze for a while with the 7mm STW and .358 STA quickly followed by the RUM versions. Lazzeroni stuff was hot for a bit. Then we went the other way with beltless short mags -- I think the .300 WSM is the only one with much steam left. Good luck if you went with the Rem SAUM versions. For a fat minute we even had the WSSM cartridges. I blinked and they were gone. Now we have the long range hunting trend, and extreme BC bullets are the thing to have and the 6.5 is back -- although not new, the .264 Win Mag, 6.5 Rem Mag and .260 Remington were all pretty capable performers. Apparently someone had learned something from the 6.5 Swede. You've got your Nosler cartridges and your PRCs and a few others. All good to be sure.

Throughout all that, the .308, .270, .30-06 and .243 have kept on rocking. There are very few sporting rifles introduced that don't include the .308 as an offering and for many of the precision types it is one of only two or three options. People work very hard to find the minutia to set apart their latest and greatest from the rabble, but actual terminal effects on game with decent bullets at reasonable ranges are negligible.

.308 has worked, continues to work and will work for me.
 
OP
General RE LEE
Joined
Dec 28, 2019
Messages
1,945
It never left and will be around long after many of the flavor of the month cartridges have enjoyed their time in the sun. I won't go back to the Weatherby days of ultra high velocity cartridges that were then emulated by the mainstream manufacturers, although we did get some pretty good and long lasting rounds out of that like the .300 WM, .338 WM and 7mm Rem Mag.

In more recent years (relatively speaking), we had the extra long action (.375/8mm Rem Mag length) magnum craze for a while with the 7mm STW and .358 STA quickly followed by the RUM versions. Lazzeroni stuff was hot for a bit. Then we went the other way with beltless short mags -- I think the .300 WSM is the only one with much steam left. Good luck if you went with the Rem SAUM versions. For a fat minute we even had the WSSM cartridges. I blinked and they were gone. Now we have the long range hunting trend, and extreme BC bullets are the thing to have and the 6.5 is back -- although not new, the .264 Win Mag, 6.5 Rem Mag and .260 Remington were all pretty capable performers. Apparently someone had learned something from the 6.5 Swede. You've got your Nosler cartridges and your PRCs and a few others. All good to be sure.

Throughout all that, the .308, .270, .30-06 and .243 have kept on rocking. There are very few sporting rifles introduced that don't include the .308 as an offering and for many of the precision types it is one of only two or three options. People work very hard to find the minutia to set apart their latest and greatest from the rabble, but actual terminal effects on game with decent bullets at reasonable ranges are negligible.

.308 has worked, continues to work and will work for me.

Very well said and your last point has been my finding as well. It’s tempting to get into ballistic tables and convince myself a new fangled cartridge will be better, but a 308 will emphatically drop deer just as well.
 

JP100

WKR
Joined
Dec 20, 2013
Messages
1,230
Location
South Island New Zealand
The versatility of the .308 makes it hard to beat.

Its not super amazing at anything, but can do so much.

Huge bullet range, works well in a 16-20" barrel, mild recoil and noise, good enough speed, easily download or make subsonics.

Ive always thought there are 3 rifles we all should have in the cupboard, a .22, a .223 and a .308.
They are the staple, then you can add on anything else you want for fun haha.
 

CCH

WKR
Joined
Mar 10, 2017
Messages
450
Location
Colorado
The versatility of the .308 makes it hard to beat.

Its not super amazing at anything, but can do so much.

Huge bullet range, works well in a 16-20" barrel, mild recoil and noise, good enough speed, easily download or make subsonics.

Ive always thought there are 3 rifles we all should have in the cupboard, a .22, a .223 and a .308.
They are the staple, then you can add on anything else you want for fun haha.

You have described my cupboard — all the cartridges anyway. I don’t feel that it’s bare.
 

thinhorn_AK

"DADDY"
Joined
Jul 2, 2016
Messages
11,286
Location
Alaska
My 308 is great, it’s cut back to 18” and I’ve got half a dozen hand loads that make groups under an inch. Even with the silencer on it, it’s under 6.5lbs. My hand loads with 165ABs, 150ttsx, 127g HH, are all excellent loads for that rifle. Just can’t go wrong with it.
 

prm

WKR
Joined
Mar 31, 2017
Messages
2,306
Location
No. VA
My 308 is great, it’s cut back to 18” and I’ve got half a dozen hand loads that make groups under an inch. Even with the silencer on it, it’s under 6.5lbs. My hand loads with 165ABs, 150ttsx, 127g HH, are all excellent loads for that rifle. Just can’t go wrong with it.
How are the 127 HH on game?
 

id_jon

WKR
Joined
Oct 6, 2018
Messages
713
Location
ID
I’ve got one of those and it’s neat, but a 308 with trail boss is silly quiet. My 300 isn’t really setup to dial those rainbow trajectories. Lol
A bolt 300bo with a 30-40 moa rail is super fun. 90gr XTP subs are probably the quietest fun you can have on varmints
 

thinhorn_AK

"DADDY"
Joined
Jul 2, 2016
Messages
11,286
Location
Alaska
How are the 127 HH on game?
Sorry, I meant 137g HH. I havnt personally used them on game yet but know people who have with excellent results. I will say that pulling the load off hammers load data sheet got me several sub 1” groups with no adjustments. It was awesome. I loaded up 20 and went to the range. After that I pressed out 50 more and I’ll probably make some more this weekend.
 
Top