Never said anything of the sort…putting words in my mouth and this is not the first time. Not the first time that you troll my posts either.Thats just as ridiculous as you continuing to say it wont work in a Tikka action
Agree, but I am not concerned. The 6:8W will do fine and Winchester will support it even if no one else does. There are 325 wsm rifles and ammo in stock right now for Pete’s sake. There was 270 wsm ammo at Cabelas the other day. Not knocking Hornady but their support is exagerrated and Winchester poo pooed by fanboys. Simply not true. Find some 300 rcm, 338 rcm, 30 tc, 308 marlin, 338’marlin new rifles and ammo. Some of the stuff Hornady introduced since 2000 was so bad people dont remember it and Hornady doesn’t support it. There are several more, totalllng well more than few WSM/wssms. Hornady has been throwing darts. The fact the 6.5 cm took off was a happy accident not some long planned stroke of genius. Hornady ran with it and good for them.Would be interesting to get some sales data for the 6.8 Western Rifles. Hard to quantify for pre-fits or custom barrels though. Looks like we are getting some traction for some premium brass. The ammo selection is good, the bullet selection is good. Things are looking up for the 6.8 Western.
Ok bud!!! Correcting you when you are wrong, which is often, isnt trollingNever said anything of the sort…putting words in my mouth and this is not the first time. Not the first time that you troll my posts either.
I would like to point out that since the Korean War the military has adopted the 7.62 NATO, the 5.56 NATO and now the 6.8 NATO.
Simply not true. Find some 300 rcm, 338 rcm, 30 tc, 308 marlin, 338’marlin new rifles and ammo.
Absolutely! They are producing the light squad weapons as I write this. i don’t know if they have deployed any yet though. The first weapons are light machine guns M250. Kinda cool you can take off your ammo belt and feed it. They are also making conversion kits for the M240.Is the 6.8/277 Fury officially adopted?
It wasn’t that long ago many were convinced the US military was going to switch over to 6.8 SPC. All sorts of articles were flying around, guys on various forums were excited for it, building rifles, etc.
…. And it ended up going nowhere basically.
Same for widespread adoption of the SCAR rifles. Lots of excitement, and outside of a few groups, it went nowhere too.
I guess I’ll believe it when it starts getting issued to regular units.
Well, the point was to contridict the message that Hornady supports their rounds better than Winchester or has a better track record. I’m not saying either do a great job but Hornady is certainly not better.You named “hunting” rounds. New introduced, well designed cartridges that are primarily aimed at hunters, don’t do well and haven’t for a long time.
This is like over 2 years ago:
“Olin-Winchester announced this week it was awarded a new Pentagon contract to complete a manufacturing study in support of the Army's new Next Generation Squad Weapon program.
The $9 million contract is for tracer projectile production for the new 6.8mm caliber Common Cartridge Family of Ammunition that will be used by NGSW platforms. The work will be done at the Winchester-run Lake City Army Ammunition Plant in Missouri. This comes just 10 months after a previous $20 million contract for Winchester to plan production of 6.8mm ammo types at Lake City.
The ammo plant is the country's main federal small arms ammo factory, making assorted 5.56 NATO, 7.62 NATO, and .50 caliber BMG rounds and has been run by Winchester since 2020. The award comes at a time when the Army is embarking on an ambitious ammunition plant modernization program at its six government-owned, contractor-operated installations.“
Winchester Lands Army Next Gen Ammo Contract :: Guns.com
Olin-Winchester announced this week it was awarded a new Pentagon contract to complete a manufacturing study in support of the Army's new Next Generation Squad Weapon program.www.guns.com
That is an old article. Winchester is already producing the ammo. The 101st airborne has the M7 and the M250:Its almost like it was a “manufacturing study”
Far be it from me to try and stop you, but sticking with subjects you actually know about would be better.
That is an old article. Winchester is already producing the ammo. The 101st airborne has the M7 and the M250:
Army to field new rifle, machine gun and optic in 2024
Soldiers with the 101st Airborne Division will be the first to field the new weapons and optics.www.armytimes.com
He wouldn't have anything to talk about if he did thatIts almost like it was a “manufacturing study”
Far be it from me to try and stop you, but sticking with subjects you actually know about would be better.
NO….The field testing is over with and the weapons are being deployed in April.No. The 101st was apart of what amount to first article field testing.
450 Bushmaster is only relevant because of the hordes of whitetail hunters in states with straight wall cartridge restrictions. Without those restrictions, the 450 wouldn't be a blip in sales.There's so much you're saying here that's reasonable and that I agree with, especially in terms of the cultures of these companies.
But to say that "shooters" buy more ammo than hunters is just not even remotely accurate. It just isn't, not even close.
Now, per person, shooters vs your average hunter? Sure, you're totally right. I shoot more centerfire rifle ammo in a few months than my dad or grandfather did in their entire lifetimes. But as a market segment, hunters absolutely swamp "shooters" by at least a full order of magnitude in ammo sales - it's not even in the same universe. Last year alone, Texas issued over 1.8 million hunting licenses, tags, etc, and Wisconsin issued over 4 million.
USPSA doesn't even have 40,000 shooters in the entire country. PRS has about 6000 total.
So even if Bubba's only buying 2 boxes of good ol' Core-Lokt for the trusty '06 each season, I guarantee you there aren't 400,000 "shooters" in any combination of competition circuits in Wisconsin buying 8 million boxes of match ammo there each year. That's just hunting rifle ammo. When you add in small game, upland birds, and waterfowl, the ammo purchased by hunters is likely an additional full order of magnitude greater or more. The numbers are absolutely insane.
This isn't to detract from your points about the differences in cultures of Hornady vs Winchester, et al, and why the shooting culture at Hornady is likely driving a huge part of their innovation and success. But it's Bubba that has kept Big Green, Winchester, etc alive, and why they don't seem to even try to innovate.
If you want to get an idea of just how massive the hunting ammo market is over "shooters", take a listen to Seth at about the 1:30 mark here - for almost a decade, .450 Bushmaster has been in the top 5 of Hornady's rifle ammo sales.
I suspect 30-06 is quite a bit higher in the top 5, and we all know that's not a round "shooters" are burning up barrels with.
I think that was his point450 Bushmaster is only relevant because of the hordes of whitetail hunters in states with straight wall cartridge restrictions. Without those restrictions, the 450 wouldn't be a blip in sales.
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I hope you drank at least 3 glasses of water after those mental gymnastics defending the 6.8 Western.Tikka will most likely offer the 280AI before the 7 PRC. I seriously doubt Tikka will offer either one though. Hand loaders tend to load those two cartridges “long” which won’t fit into the standard Tikka magazines. There are so many rifles chambered in 6.8 Western now: Winchester, Browning, Fierce, Christiansen Arms, Seekins. I doubt that Savage, Ruger or Tikka could pull very much of of that market share at this time. If the 6.8 Western continues to take off, Tikka could chamber for it, but I think that would be years away if it does happen.
Currently, the number of factory ammo offerings are the same between the 6.8 Western and the 7 PRC. The 7 PRC is a long action cartridge which is a disadvantage. The 6.8 Western is a short action cartridge. The 280 AI is gaining even more traction. The 7 Rem Mag has been at the top. Both of those long action 7s are tough acts to follow in a production rifle. The 6.8 Western fills a “niche”. The 7 PRC does not. The 6.8 Western fills the niche as a short action cartridge with magnum performance and lower recoil. My opinion is that the 7 PRC will eventually be right along side the 28 Nosler. But hey what ever blows your socks off.