I kind of skimmed through. I have a PRC, it’s a sweet round with options for the hand loader and great factory offerings. I shot a bull this year at 360yds with the Federal offering of the ELD-X. Dropped in his tracks.
If you buy a 1:8 for the RM you’d have to spec how it’s reamed for the free bore or else you’re just reducing case capacity.
The RM already seats its heavier range bullets deeper into the case because the free bore in a SAAMI chamber won’t let you seat the longer bullets further out of the case. So, if you want a 1:8 to maximize BC capability, and shoot heavy handloads, but you do it without a custom chamber, you just have to shove a extra long bullet way into a case and use less powder, an lose all the benefits.
If you want a RM get a 1:8 with a custom chamber to get the advantage of the high BC bullets in a RM, but the long free bore may or may not hate factory ammo since it will have excessive “jump” at that point with standard weight/length bullets. The PRC is made for long bullets, and there is no short/light bullet option in factory, so, it should shoot factory and handloads reasonably well.
There are 5-6 factory loads for the PRC now. Between Hornady’s shenanigans and the 7BC, I wonder how the PRC will be in 5years. It may be strong since it did take off well, but it’s still young enough to let a few blows to the knees take it out. I had a Marlin 336 in Hornady .308MX I was lucky to get sold, and a Ruger Alaskan .480 Ruger that somehow I sold for retail. Two of Hornady’s attractive inventions that they just discontinued one day. And they didn’t just discontinue the ammo. They quit components. No brass. No bullets. No reloading without heavy modifications to other components. So, I’m watching for signs to bail on the PRC.
I love my PRC. I shoot factory, and handload. As long as I can get brass, and factory, I’m keeping it.
1 Go PRC for factory with advantage.
2 Go RM factory 1:10 for proven track record.
3 Go custom twist, custom chamber, custom ammo in a RM if you want an equivalent to a factory PRC.
With modern rangefinders and calculators, it doesn’t matter. If you’re dialing or using mil dots or MOAR, who cares. Shoot an ‘06 with 180s. If you have to touch the turrets, does it matter if you dial 5 MOA or 6.6 MOA? Sure, the faster, higher BC might compensate for some small errors, but only small errors. I dialed 4.5 MOA to shoot my elk this year. If I had been shooting an ‘06, I’d have dialed 5.5 or whatever that came to. Literally zero lost time or effort for hunting. For ELR, there may be a real value.
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