Large caliber vs. small caliber debate

Speaks

FNG
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They won’t haha.

I’ve definitely posted my “experiences” and “opinions” on this “debate” many times here on Rokslide in lots threads over the years.

I’ve been a huge proponent of lower recoiling cartridges going back to way before Rokslide was a web site. I still have folks message me or come up to me in my hometown when bumped into and thank me for steering them to 6.5 and 6mm chamberings for hunting and shooting.

I appreciate everyone’s experiences and ideas but these threads always end up the same way. The only way to see this is live shooting in person snd looking at the results together and going “hmmm”. But the vast majority of folks would rather talk about it on the internet instead of going out and trying it.

For me personally I’ve shared enough replies and experiences of real shooters to the tune of hundreds of folks. The results are what they are and I’ve been vocal on those results on this forum.

I’ll be stepping away from these types of discussions moving forward as it honestly mostly seems like it’s falling on deaf ears with folks already having an idea in their head and can’t be tasked with even trying something else. However, if somebody asks me directly for my opinion and experience on a subject, I’m happy to answer or provide photos and videos of shooting.

The going back and forth and talking in circles with folks unwilling to video themselves shooting live or accept an open invitation from me in 4 options of states to meet up and shoot, its just a bit pointless to me at this point to “debate it”.

Appreciate everyone’s experiences and replies to me personally. Happy shooting and Merry Christmas to all you heathens!!!

I will be posting shooting videos, so if anyone is interested in a winter and spring full of hunting terrain shot scenarios, shooting “groups”, checking rifle zeros after nasty drives and pack outs, etc. I’ll be starting an “adventures” thread to check out sometime soon.

Cheers!
These threads really opened my eyes to the effectiveness of smaller calibers. I was very much set on magnums before. So I do think the experiences posted have done a lot of good.
 

hereinaz

WKR
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These threads really opened my eyes to the effectiveness of smaller calibers. I was very much set on magnums before. So I do think the experiences posted have done a lot of good.
I agree, it can seem like a never ending quest, and it is… there are new people all the time coming with an open mind.

And, there are lots of people reading but not participating that benefit from the repeated and well reasoned explanations about small caliber high BC/heavy for caliber match bullets.

It matters that the proponents mostly stay reasonable. I usually add a few things each thread, adding a different aspect or way to look at it.
 

huntnful

WKR
Joined
Oct 10, 2020
Messages
2,337
They won’t haha.

I’ve definitely posted my “experiences” and “opinions” on this “debate” many times here on Rokslide in lots threads over the years.

I’ve been a huge proponent of lower recoiling cartridges going back to way before Rokslide was a web site. I still have folks message me or come up to me in my hometown when bumped into and thank me for steering them to 6.5 and 6mm chamberings for hunting and shooting.

I appreciate everyone’s experiences and ideas but these threads always end up the same way. The only way to see this is live shooting in person snd looking at the results together and going “hmmm”. But the vast majority of folks would rather talk about it on the internet instead of going out and trying it.

For me personally I’ve shared enough replies and experiences of real shooters to the tune of hundreds of folks. The results are what they are and I’ve been vocal on those results on this forum.

I’ll be stepping away from these types of discussions moving forward as it honestly mostly seems like it’s falling on deaf ears with folks already having an idea in their head and can’t be tasked with even trying something else. However, if somebody asks me directly for my opinion and experience on a subject, I’m happy to answer or provide photos and videos of shooting.

The going back and forth and talking in circles with folks unwilling to video themselves shooting live or accept an open invitation from me in 4 options of states to meet up and shoot, its just a bit pointless to me at this point to “debate it”.

Appreciate everyone’s experiences and replies to me personally. Happy shooting and Merry Christmas to all you heathens!!!

I will be posting shooting videos, so if anyone is interested in a winter and spring full of hunting terrain shot scenarios, shooting “groups”, checking rifle zeros after nasty drives and pack outs, etc. I’ll be starting an “adventures” thread to check out sometime soon.

Cheers!
I’m very much looking forward to shooting! It’s been a steep learning curve not having a ton of direction for the first few years. But I’m really wanting to make good, legit progress. I’m ready to be humbled 100% haha.
 
Joined
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I was on the 30 cal magnum bandwagon for most of my hunting years. Instead of constantly debating it, I took the information in. I processed it and thought about it. The steps that followed went something like this:
I built a "small" caliber rifle in 25-284.
I shot and practiced with said rifle alongside my semi-custom 300wsm.
I tested the small gun on game.

1st few animals I was pleasantly surprised, but still skeptical. Many animals later and for some reason I don't have that beautiful 300wsm anymore.

My brother, skeptical, but based on purely my results without any pressure from me, obtained a smaller cartridge and started "testing" the waters. For some reason, he now will have a 300 win mag carbon barrel for sale...crazy.

I don't argue for or against magnums vs non-magnums. I know what I personally prefer in a cartridge, but rather than have all these unending arguments, why not try a small caliber and report back good or bad? At the worst you eat crow and succumb to the idea that smaller is just fine, maybe better! Or, on the contrary, one can show evidence of why small calibers are a bad idea. Sounds like a win either way? Nearly anyone arguing against small calibers will have access to something in the realm of <6.5mm.

Why not load that up with the frangible bullet of your choosing and prove to us that's a bad idea?

Let's learn, discuss, grow from being open to different ideas. I certainly wouldn't speak on the effectiveness of small calibers if I did not have a meaningful sample size to do so...relatively speaking of course.
 

Schmo

WKR
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As much as I poo poo a 6mm bullet for trophy hunting, right now my favorite doe rifle is a 6mm-06
So, honest question for you. Why is it only your doe rifle, and not a buck rifle? I assume it’s because you feel you may lose a deer, and wouldn’t want it to be a buck that you’re losing. My question would be: if you feel it’s inferior for bucks, then why would you use it on a doe?
 

mtnbound

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Nov 8, 2016
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512
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N. Idaho
You read through the same posts I do, just from a different perspective - I’m not reading for information on the new bullet performance, I’m happy with the performance of old ancient technology Accubonds, but rather the interesting part are the stories of the rodeos starting from from first trigger pull.

I did say this was homework - it requires a little effort :)
It's pretty easy, actually. Updated Failures post.
 

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hereinaz

WKR
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Arizona
I was on the 30 cal magnum bandwagon for most of my hunting years. Instead of constantly debating it, I took the information in. I processed it and thought about it. The steps that followed went something like this:
I built a "small" caliber rifle in 25-284.
I shot and practiced with said rifle alongside my semi-custom 300wsm.
I tested the small gun on game.

1st few animals I was pleasantly surprised, but still skeptical. Many animals later and for some reason I don't have that beautiful 300wsm anymore.

My brother, skeptical, but based on purely my results without any pressure from me, obtained a smaller cartridge and started "testing" the waters. For some reason, he now will have a 300 win mag carbon barrel for sale...crazy.

I don't argue for or against magnums vs non-magnums. I know what I personally prefer in a cartridge, but rather than have all these unending arguments, why not try a small caliber and report back good or bad? At the worst you eat crow and succumb to the idea that smaller is just fine, maybe better! Or, on the contrary, one can show evidence of why small calibers are a bad idea. Sounds like a win either way? Nearly anyone arguing against small calibers will have access to something in the realm of <6.5mm.

Why not load that up with the frangible bullet of your choosing and prove to us that's a bad idea?

Let's learn, discuss, grow from being open to different ideas. I certainly wouldn't speak on the effectiveness of small calibers if I did not have a meaningful sample size to do so...relatively speaking of course.
It’s hard not to stop and think about “confessions” like this. I think it’s some of the most valuable information out of these threads. Someone with no dog in the “fight”.

I like that you said, just give it a try.

I came to it after seeing my 7mm smash mulies, blacktail deer, caribou and elk, then seeing it destroying a Coues deer at 730 yards, all with a 180 7mm VLD… you’d think it would have bled off enough velocity not to destroy it.

I knew I could drop to a smaller caliber after that. I just didn’t realize it could go down to the 77 gr .223 bulllets.

And, I had plenty of experience shooting 6mm in matches. The wake-up call really came when I shot my hunting 7mm rifle in the second ever NRL Hunter match and performing terrible even though the 7mm shot small groups at 100 yards and I could ring steel at 1000 on the range.

I sucked, just like @wind gypsy predicts for so most who try. Believe me, it is a humbling experience, and I have seen the scores and met people in the same boat as me. There are always a few exceptions, but they are rare.
 
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It’s hard not to stop and think about “confessions” like this. I think it’s some of the most valuable information out of these threads. Someone with no dog in the “fight”.

I like that you said, just give it a try.

I came to it after seeing my 7mm smash mulies, blacktail deer, caribou and elk, then seeing it destroying a Coues deer at 730 yards, all with a 180 7mm VLD… you’d think it would have bled off enough velocity not to destroy it.

I knew I could drop to a smaller caliber after that. I just didn’t realize it could go down to the 77 gr .223 bulllets.

And, I had plenty of experience shooting 6mm in matches. The wake-up call really came when I shot my hunting 7mm rifle in the second ever NRL Hunter match and performing terrible even though the 7mm shot small groups at 100 yards and I could ring steel at 1000 on the range.

I sucked, just like @wind gypsy predicts for so most who try. Believe me, it is a humbling experience, and I have seen the scores and met people in the same boat as me. There are always a few exceptions, but they are rare.

I love this, and I love the acceptance that our preconceived notions are not all based on fact, but often fallacy. I have killed 2 caribou with 60 grain varmint bullets at short ranges from a 224 valkyrie. I wouldn't say the deaths were dramatic, but they certainly did not suffer. This is not me condoning varmint bullets for big game, there's a middle ground to be had for most. For me it's cup and core design only moving forward.

The day before Christmas eve 4 of us are getting together to shoot the 7/5/3/2 moa target drill. With a little flare. It will all be steel targets set at various distances to make each 6" square target the appropriate moa size. All 4 rifles are set up differently and in 4 different calibers, with 4 different stocks/chassis. I should do a write up on the "test" between the different set ups and what was liked/wasn't liked.
 

AZ_Hunter

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Shooting MOA groups is much easier from a bench or prone or really any controlled situation where you're addressing the rifle the same way shot to shot. In this scenario, any dispersion impacts from recoil may be similar round to round because you're in a controlled situation building the exact same position shot to shot thus the group stays tight. When in significantly different and more compromised positions, POI is going to shift more in part due to your rifle moving differently under recoil in different positions due to what forces you are imparting on the rifle. Similar to this, but not entirely due to recoil, you'll tend to see larger groups if someone builds a position from scratch for every shot vs staying in position and shooting a group.

This is part of what the kraft drill seeks to diagnose - kraft drill is shooting shots from prone, seating, kneeling, standing (all supported). It's not uncommon to have varying POI from different positions. I tend to have lower POI from the prone occasionally if loading a bipod for example.

Also, i think part of my statement about ALL shooters shooting lower recoil better seemed to get missed The debate is in to what extent. Certainly its possible and likely for external ballistics to outweigh impact in shooter's precision capabilities from increased recoil but its largely situation specific. Until one shoots a bunch and measures the difference in actual field type positions/conditions, it seems pretty hard to know just what the impact is.
POI shift from different positions is spot on. This is one of many reasons I find claims of zero shift of .1 or so mils due to “scope failure” highly dubious. Simply changing face pressure on the stock can shift POI due to the rifle moving under recoil differently and to your point, all that is exacerbated by heavier recoil.

All this is another reason why I have mostly used AR systems for hunting. It’s extremely easy to stay in the scope and make fast accurate follow ups without breaking position.
 

huntnful

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Oct 10, 2020
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It’s hard not to stop and think about “confessions” like this. I think it’s some of the most valuable information out of these threads. Someone with no dog in the “fight”.

I like that you said, just give it a try.

I came to it after seeing my 7mm smash mulies, blacktail deer, caribou and elk, then seeing it destroying a Coues deer at 730 yards, all with a 180 7mm VLD… you’d think it would have bled off enough velocity not to destroy it.

I knew I could drop to a smaller caliber after that. I just didn’t realize it could go down to the 77 gr .223 bulllets.

And, I had plenty of experience shooting 6mm in matches. The wake-up call really came when I shot my hunting 7mm rifle in the second ever NRL Hunter match and performing terrible even though the 7mm shot small groups at 100 yards and I could ring steel at 1000 on the range.

I sucked, just like @wind gypsy predicts for so most who try. Believe me, it is a humbling experience, and I have seen the scores and met people in the same boat as me. There are always a few exceptions, but they are rare.
Great info and perspective here!

Why no wake up call when you were just hunting with the 7mm? You had to shoot the match to have the wake up call? Were you missing/wounding animals with the 7mm while hunting? I watch the NRL shoots often and don't think they mimic most hunting scenarios very well. Actual hunting seems MUCH less chaotic. Which is why I'm assuming you didn't have that light switch moment at all while actually hunting. But needed to shoot a match, with intentionally configured forced positions and fast paced scenarios to have it?

I was apart of 15 or so medium/big game kills this year. Only one was anywhere near hectic. And it was my own kill on a running pig at 300 yards. I was GLAD I had my 22 CM and not a big magnum in that scenario. Other than that, everything was pretty nonchalant, just lay down and kill it type stuff. From 80-1114 yards this year. I think that's why it's easy to be like "yeah it's not that big of a deal" when 90%+ of the kills you're on or apart of just aren't that hectic.

Edit to say, I redact that statement. I had another good buddy miss at 150 yards seated unsupported, and then again at 480 yards prone, due to wind paired with parachute bullets. Both great bucks. He was shooting a 300 WM with 180 TTSX's. Both scenarios would have absolutely benefited from smaller faster flying higher BC projectiles and more positional practice.
 
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The butt does the same thing every time, bounce off the shoulder. Doesn’t matter a whole lot what a butt is made out of.

Bullets do different things in the way they transfer energy. A match bullet explodes and a mono mushrooms and penetrates. That’s why energy can’t be used for bullets.

What do you think causes the explosion or mushroom and penetrate?
 
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