Going smaller!

Joined
Nov 15, 2025
Messages
2
I’m going smaller with my hunting rifle and committing to being a better shot with range time and instruction. I currently shoot a suppressed .30-06 custom rifle from APR with S&B glass. Beautiful rig, but I have an ugly flinch when pulling the trigger. I need help with caliber selection for a new rifle. It will mostly be a range/whitetail gun inside of 300 yds- maybe a trip to Alaska for bigger game or an elk hunt once or twice in my life.

My q. I do not hand load my own ammo. For factory load options, which would you choose:
1) 6mm creed
2) .243 (1:8 twist barrel)
3) 6.5 creed

Rifle will be Seekins ph3,Sako 90 hunter, or custom. It will be suppressed, and have atacr glass.

I’d be grateful for your recs on factory cartridges as well. Please and thank you.
 
6.5 Creedmoor handily wins for factory load options.

Practice: Hornady 140gr American Gunner, Norma 130gr Golden Target
Hunting: Hornady Match 140gr (or 147 gr), Precision Hunter 143gr
 
I believe you should work on getting rid of the flinch instead of just shopping for another big game rifle. I don't think simply swapping rifles will fix your issue. Your suppressed 30'06 shouldn't be kicking that bad unless it's extremely light. There are lots of techniques to help you work on the flinch.

However, a rifle with less kick will be more fun to shoot. You can get there a lot of different ways. I'd consider a 308 as well with 130-150 gr bullets. If you don't reload, I don't think you need a 1in8 243. Any 243 will work. Most factory loads don't have that heavy of bullets. I believe 243 ammo is a lot less than the Creeds.
 
If you don't hand load, 6 creed. If you do hand load 6 creed for ease of handling brass.

I will probably stick with 243 because I handload and already have brass and dies.
 
I imagine by your scope choice you do intend for a good bit of your practice to be longer range?

My opinion would be 6 creedmoor considering your use is primarily whitetail, though it is reportedly plenty capable for the larger game as well. And also if you are working on a flinch issue, dropping significantly in recoil will probably help a good bit.

6.5 creedmoor would buy you slightly better BC and longer barrel life, at the expense of more recoil than the 6.

If you aren’t shooting much long range, get a .223 tikka for training and for deer. Re-work your custom rifle to shoot 6 or 6.5 later on when you have fixed your flinch and know what you need.
 
I believe you should work on getting rid of the flinch instead of just shopping for another big game rifle. I don't think simply swapping rifles will fix your issue. Your suppressed 30'06 shouldn't be kicking that bad unless it's extremely light. There are lots of techniques to help you work on the flinch.

However, a rifle with less kick will be more fun to shoot. You can get there a lot of different ways. I'd consider a 308 as well with 130-150 gr bullets. If you don't reload, I don't think you need a 1in8 243. Any 243 will work. Most factory loads don't have that heavy of bullets. I believe 243 ammo is a lot less than the Creeds.
You are 100% correct.
 
I believe you should work on getting rid of the flinch instead of just shopping for another big game rifle. I don't think simply swapping rifles will fix your issue. Your suppressed 30'06 shouldn't be kicking that bad unless it's extremely light. There are lots of techniques to help you work on the flinch.

However, a rifle with less kick will be more fun to shoot. You can get there a lot of different ways. I'd consider a 308 as well with 130-150 gr bullets. If you don't reload, I don't think you need a 1in8 243. Any 243 will work. Most factory loads don't have that heavy of bullets. I believe 243 ammo is a lot less than the Creeds.
Agreed. Thus the mention of range time and training. I think 6.5 creed recoil will be my upper ceiling.
 
Back
Top