- Thread Starter
- #21
JollyRogers
FNG
- Joined
- Sep 17, 2022
- Messages
- 36
Southern Louisiana (Mandeville)Where are you located?
Southern Louisiana (Mandeville)Where are you located?
Tikka 6.5 creedmoor is about perfect for you. The PRC will take you beyond 600 yards in terms of enough impact velocity but shooting that far, reliably, in the field..is not something that most guys are willing to put in the effort to learn. Unless you have a place to easily shoot long distance close to home, it’s just not realistic. There are plenty of guys who can shoot “600 all day long” but few shoot it often enough and in varying wind or in field positions to honestly have a high hit percentage at that range.Well I made it out to bass pro and a couple other shops to shoulder the potential rifles. I definitely understand the love for tikka now! The bolt just seems so much more refined than the other platforms. Even got to handle a savage 110 ultralite which while noticeably lighter didn’t seem as refined for the money compared to the basic tikka.
Guess I’ll be saving a bit longer to grow my budget to accommodate the tikka.
A few things I would add and/or echo...
I'd steer you heavily away from a magnum (even 6.5) as an "only gun." Creedmoor would be the easy button for cheap(ish), low recoil long barrel life practice and hunting cartridge. .308 is another great contender. You will never regret owning one, even if you add a magnum or otherwise hot rod rifle later. I shoot a lot more .223 and .308 than I do 7mm RM.
Long range proficiency is a perishable skill. For me at least, it was not something where I hit some cumulative level of practice and gained some permanent ability after 2000 rounds that I can now maintain with minimal practice. I spent several years shooting maybe a hundred rounds a year of practice. There was very little improvement during that time; I was a 100 round per year shooter. I was not 5x better after 5 years, but I did get 5x better when I started shooting 500 rounds a year. Obviously there will be a point of diminishing returns, but I'm not sure where exactly that is. It depends a lot on how you practice. 500 rounds of focused practice from field positions at different distances trying to make first round hits is much different than 500 rounds off the bench, taking 3-4 shots to walk it in on a big plate at 800 yd and then banging away on that plate for another 17 rounds and telling yourself you went 17/20 at 800.
Sorry for the digression, I realize it's not the question you asked but I think it's relevant. It's a really long-winded explanation of why you should have a 308 or 6.5 creedmoor or something similar to get several hundred rounds of practice every year, rather just planning on burning down your factory barrel to get good and then put a carbon barrel on and not having a rifle you can/want to shoot that kind of volume on (ammo cost, barrel life, recoil considerations all factor in) to maintain the level of proficiency needed to utilize the difference in capability between a Creed and a PRC (especially with elk being an edge case).
If you just have to tinker, the savage is ok (I own a savage and have done a fair bit to it myself. I get the appeal). A Tikka is a better rifle IMO. More reliable, better aftermarket, smoother. Mostly the reliability though. I've had broken bolt parts and minor feeding issues but nothing major on mine.
You can watch impacts through the scope with the right setup, but you will not be watching trace with a hunting weight rifle in a standard short action or larger chambering.