Do you think a 300 prc has the accuracy potential of the smaller prc’s in a hunting weight rifle. Just concerned that it won’t be as consistent due to the higher recoil.
Just a Grok summary with things to consider. No idea if you can handle kick or not. I'm assuming you will use a brake or suppressor.
The 300 PRC is generally considered the most inherently accurate Hornady PRC cartridge, particularly for extreme long-range precision.
All three Hornady PRC cartridges (6.5 PRC, 7mm PRC, and 300 PRC) are engineered for excellent accuracy through modern design features like a 30° shoulder, minimal body taper, beltless cases for better headspacing, tight throat tolerances (just ~0.0005–0.0008" over bullet diameter), and optimization for long, high-BC bullets with temperature-stable powders. These traits promote superior concentricity, alignment, and consistency compared to older magnums.
However, the
300 PRC stands out as the most precision-oriented:
- It was specifically developed with input from the U.S. Department of Defense for extended long-range sniping, emphasizing "match-grade" accuracy and heavy-for-caliber bullets (e.g., 212–225gr ELD-M at ~2,800–2,950 fps).
- Hornady describes it as a "large 30 caliber match accurate cartridge" designed concurrently with its chamber for "excellent alignment and highly tuned performance."
- Real-world reports frequently highlight sub-0.5 MOA groups with factory match ammo, and it's praised for outperforming belts like the .300 Win Mag in consistency and long-range precision.
The
7mm PRC (introduced 2022) is a close second—often called a "do-it-all" with outstanding factory-load accuracy (e.g., 0.3–0.5 MOA in tests) and the best trajectory/wind performance among the three due to high-BC 7mm bullets (175–180gr ELD-X/M). It excels in hunting/precision balance with less recoil than the 300 PRC.
The
6.5 PRC is highly accurate with very low recoil, making it forgiving and repeatable for shooters, but its smaller bullets lose energy and drift more at extreme ranges compared to the larger siblings.
Inherent accuracy is ultimately rifle-, load-, and shooter-dependent, but the 300 PRC's design and military validation give it the edge for pure precision potential, especially beyond 1,000 yards. For most hunters or all-around use, the 7mm PRC's combination of accuracy, flatter trajectory, and manageable recoil often feels "most accurate" in practice.