6mm prc

What is the experience or opinions on a CF barrel vs aggressive fluted steel barrel in the same length , in a this cartridge.

I understand CF vs Steel overall but curious if anyone had specific experience with both from the same barrel manufacturer.

I'm leaning steel with fluting due to its ability to cool down better when you want to go out and shoot more then 3 rounds in 30 minutes at some steel.

I’ve completely abandoned carbon for good stainless barrels and couldn’t be happier. I don’t like flutes personally so I just go with a lighter contour for weight savings. The only issue with long strings is mirage
I routinely shoot long strings with sporter weight barrels


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What is the experience or opinions on a CF barrel vs aggressive fluted steel barrel in the same length , in a this cartridge.

I understand CF vs Steel overall but curious if anyone had specific experience with both from the same barrel manufacturer.

I'm leaning steel with fluting due to its ability to cool down better when you want to go out and shoot more then 3 rounds in 30 minutes at some steel.
I was once a carbon proponent, and then a steel proponent. And now, I just don’t think it really even matters. Especially for hunting. After being around guys properly building guns with both carbon and steel barrels, I don’t think you can shoot the difference most of the time. One of the best groups I ever shot was very recently was on a carbon barreled 28 Nosler. 5 straight shots of 180 ELDM’s with N570 landed into .2 MOA at 150 yards.

So now I’m kind of just, whatever you can find and whatever suites your fancy type of thing.

My steel Brux barrels have absolutely hammered with no effort at all. I really like that about them. But there are so many options out there that I’m sure could produce similar results.
 
I was once a carbon proponent, and then a steel proponent. And now, I just don’t think it really even matters. Especially for hunting. After being around guys properly building guns with both carbon and steel barrels, I don’t think you can shoot the difference most of the time. One of the best groups I ever shot was very recently was on a carbon barreled 28 Nosler. 5 straight shots of 180 ELDM’s with N570 landed into .2 MOA at 150 yards.

So now I’m kind of just, whatever you can find and whatever suites your fancy type of thing.

My steel Brux barrels have absolutely hammered with no effort at all. I really like that about them. But there are so many options out there that I’m sure could produce similar results.
all fair points!
 
FedEx dropped the ball today. No explanation of missed scheduled delivery. Just changed the date to Friday. That was a driver sticking it to the man and getting some extra holiday down time. Not sure if anyone will be around Friday to sign. I won't.
 
What is the experience or opinions on a CF barrel vs aggressive fluted steel barrel in the same length , in a this cartridge.

I understand CF vs Steel overall but curious if anyone had specific experience with both from the same barrel manufacturer.

I'm leaning steel with fluting due to its ability to cool down better when you want to go out and shoot more then 3 rounds in 30 minutes at some steel.
Generel numbers here, but with all the load development we have done, I am close. Carbon barrels are fussier than steel barrels when seen in large numbers. If we took one hundred carbon barrels, 8-10 would not shoot, while one hundred steel barrels, 1- 2 would not shoot. I like 2% odds over 10% odds.
 
Generel numbers here, but with all the load development we have done, I am close. Carbon barrels are fussier than steel barrels when seen in large numbers. If we took one hundred carbon barrels, 8-10 would not shoot, while one hundred steel barrels, 1- 2 would not shoot. I like 2% odds over 10% odds.
I bet that pretty close. And spiral fluting the steel can be dicey as well as I just found at. Had a barrel with horizontal scaring across all the lands for a decent length up near the muzzle. And I believe it’s from an internal device holding it concentric and slipping during the fluting process.

If I had to bet on sheer precision guaranteed. Untampered steel barrel all day. But lately I’ve just seen a pile of stupid precise carbons that has me not so on the fence anymore.
 
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I bet that pretty close. And spiral fluting the steel can be dicey as well as I just found at. Had a barrel with horizontal scaring across all the lands for a decent length up near the muzzle. And I believe it’s from an internal device holding it concentric and slipping during the fluting process.

If I had to bet on sheer accuracy. Untampered steel barrel all day.
100% I have stopped fluting my barrels and dropped a couple of contours.
 
I’ve got a c6 sendero I really like for 7 PRC, but my #3 ace done for 6PRC is actually heavier, but a ton. The light or taperless contours seem like the way. Not really a fan of the spiral fluting either.
 
Generel numbers here, but with all the load development we have done, I am close. Carbon barrels are fussier than steel barrels when seen in large numbers. If we took one hundred carbon barrels, 8-10 would not shoot, while one hundred steel barrels, 1- 2 would not shoot. I like 2% odds over 10% odds.
What brand carbon barrels?
 
There was a time when I thought I needed 0.725” dia muzzle for 5/8 threads and the only way to get there and not be heavier than I wanted was carbon or heavy fluting. There are enough alternatives now that I think fluting and carbon are a waste of money and more negative than positive.
 
Tried this cartridge out yesterday, results below.


Deer down pretty quick but was thinking about 180s out of my 7 PRC on the way out….granted likely wouldn’t be so easy to send 3 down range as quick as I did yesterday?
 
Tried this cartridge out yesterday, results below.


Deer down pretty quick but was thinking about 180s out of my 7 PRC on the way out….granted likely wouldn’t be so easy to send 3 down range as quick as I did yesterday?

What do you believe the 7 PRC is going to get you?
 
What do you believe the 7 PRC is going to get you?
More recoil, slower follow ups, more/deeper damage. Certainly don’t need the extended expansion range it provides.

Based on what I saw, I don’t really need a larger total dia wound…the 175 ELDX honestly didn’t seem that much larger in total diameter but punched a bigger hole through both sides with the retained mass/base of bullet. Not sure that’s “necessary” though.

First smaller caliber kill, and old habits die hard :) but it’s apparent those 108s can put some hurt on.

Interestingly enough I hunted with a friend who put a 180 TTSX through a hind quarter and cut the femoral artery, super quick kill in a dynamic situation. Physical wound wasn’t huge. Made me curious what a heavy for caliber frangible 6 might do in a similar situation (he was shooting till it was down, bull was bailing).
 
More recoil, slower follow ups, more/deeper damage.

That’s a bullet selection determined thing. Bergers ares going to give you exits reliably- others will. If you want deeper and still wide wounds, the 115gr Nosering DTAC’s will do that.


Certainly don’t need the extended expansion range it provides.

Very few do.



Based on what I saw, I don’t really need a larger total dia wound…the 175 ELDX honestly didn’t seem that much larger in total diameter but punched a bigger hole through both sides with the retained mass/base of bullet. Not sure that’s “necessary” though.

Again that’s mostly bullet selection. It isn’t hard to find bullet that behaves similarly to the 180gr ELD-M in tissue; as the 180gr ELD-M isn’t optimized (maximized) in 7mm for wound channel size.


First smaller caliber kill, and old habits die hard :) but it’s apparent those 108s can put some hurt on.

They all kill and the 7PRC is a great cartridge. As for follow-up shots, etc., after a lot of animals and tracking it with a bunch of shooters, when people shoot until animals are down- the amount of rounds per cartridge/caliber tracks with how many rounds that person can hit within 10-15 seconds as that’s how long the average animals stays conscious.




Interestingly enough I hunted with a friend who put a 180 TTSX through a hind quarter and cut the femoral artery, super quick kill in a dynamic situation. Physical wound wasn’t huge. Made me curious what a heavy for caliber frangible 6 might do in a similar situation (he was shooting till it was down, bull was bailing).

Kill very quickly, and damage a lot of meat.
 
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