308 Winchester, in the same weight gun, using the bullets I mentioned will have a very noticeable increase in felt recoil over the 6.5 CMThey are way closer in felt recoil than you are estimating.
Adding a can to both cartridges will benefit any shooter I agree.Add a can and it makes less of a perceptible difference in felt recoil.
A 30-40% increase in free recoil energy will be “felt by the shooter” 100% of the time.That is all that matters, the recoil felt by the shooter. If you were ONLY measuring free recoil then it wouldn't matter that the weight of the rifle was 8 lbs. because free recoil is independent of that variable.
See the formula I provided. You can calculate it yourself.There is not much difference in case capacity between the two cartridges. Where would all that extra felt recoil be coming from? All things equal, the variable in these two cartridges factor into felt recoil is bullet weight and velocity. It certainly is not the powder capacity that differentiates the two cartridges.
I disagree. If I’m hunting with either gun I tend to lean towards the heavy for caliber high BC bullets to maximize my opportunities with the cartridge.There is no need to compare a heavy .308 win to a heavy 6.5 CM.
Perform better how?If the goal is to shoot heavy 180+ gr. bullets, the .30-06 would perform better.
Use the formula.A 140-150 gr. in 6.5cm and a 150-165 gr. in .308 win cases will have not have more than 1-3 ft.lb difference in felt recoil. I don't know how you arrived at these numbers but it seems almost like you're comparing a .243 win and a .30-06 and misrepresenting both of the .308 win and 6.5 CM. Show your work, if you plugged it into shooter calculator then how did you arrive at the figure? I can't seem to reverse engineer your numbers with the guns and bullets that I shoot.
Who said anything about ONLY optimizing for BC? I like to shoot bullets that kill big game animals well.If you're ONLY optimizing for BC just pick the 6.5 CM and shoot longer lighter bullets faster. If you want to go lighter and faster still, there are the .243 caliber brothers of both these cartridges.
Agree. .308 is a great cartridge as I mentioned in my first post and multiple follow up posts. .308s advantages are stated in my first post.There is more often, than not, cheaper per round practice ammo for .308. It's a little easier on barrel life. It probably starts dropping off faster out past 400 yds.