stanginthe11s
WKR
- Joined
- Jul 6, 2022
- Messages
- 571
its always fun to watch people debate the same thing and not even realize it.
I'm waiting to see if I can find a deal on an Xbolt Speed in 7-08 as they will no longer be making them. Otherwise I will probably buy an Xbolt 2 in 308. Nothing wrong with doing my homework and analysis. I don't buy a new rifle every day.All three are essentially the same within most hunters maximum effective range. And if you are asking this question, all three are likely beyond your effective range. Stop with the analysis paralysis and pick one.
One thing to consider OP, is ammo availability, in that category the 6.5cm and .308 win by a mile. Between those two it’s pretty fairly close with the edge going to .308, but you can find 6.5 everywhere and it’s pretty reasonable maybe a hair more expensive than .308 in comparable loadsI'm waiting to see if I can find a deal on an Xbolt Speed in 7-08 as they will no longer be making them. Otherwise I will probably buy and Xbolt 2 in 308. Nothing wrong with doing my homework and analysis. I don't buy a new rifle every day.
Yes this is a very good point! I wish 7-08 ammo was more readily available.One thing to consider OP, is ammo availability, in that category the 6.5cm and .308 win by a mile. Between those two it’s pretty fairly close with the edge going to .308, but you can find 6.5 everywhere and it’s pretty reasonable maybe a hair more expensive than .308 in comparable loads
Barrels are easily changed.The shorter barrel life is a significant consideration for me with the 6.5C.
That argument makes no sense for anyone actually looking to be proficient at long range. You can swap a barrel yourself for $300 and 30 min.The shorter barrel life is a significant consideration for me with the 6.5C.
What bullet if you don't mind sharing?@Article 4
Was it 3,400 ft-lbs of energy, or 340 ft-lbs of energy that created this wound in this elk?
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What about this one?
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What about this one- 3,400ft-lbs or 340ft-lbs?
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2,600 ft-lbs, or 400ft-lbs?
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2,600ft-lbs or 400ft-lbs?
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Nearly 4,000ft-lbs? Or under 400?
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The same- almost 4,000ft-lbs or under 400?
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7mm-08 and the 6.5 will be about the same and 308 more but bbl life is one thing i would not worry about between the 3.The shorter barrel life is a significant consideration for me with the 6.5C.
How long do you figure it will take you to shoot over 2500 rounds through it? If you're a factory ammo guy that's realistically pushing $4k in ammo and possibly considerably more.The shorter barrel life is a significant consideration for me with the 6.5C.
What bullet if you don't mind sharing?
I shot about 500 rounds prior to my last trip out west (not counting a handful of rounds in the woods for whitetails).Another consideration with 7/08 - the bullets that would maximize effective range in it aren't commonly loaded in factory ammo.
How long do you figure it will take you to shoot over 2500 rounds through it? If you're a factory ammo guy that's realistically pushing $4k in ammo and possibly considerably more.
That is not my understanding with an Xbolt. Am I missing something?
It’s not as simple/straightforward as something like a Tikka, but it’s possible to re-barrel any action essentially unless it’s a press fit barreled action assembly. The x bolt is a threaded assembly, so it can be rebarreled. It’s more difficult because it has a finer thread pitch than other rifles, but totally doable. You can order a stainless replacement barrel for your x bolt from McGowan up in Montana for $377, I just checked. Then you’d pay a smith to spin your old one off and torque the replacement on, probably $100-ish is my guess, whatever an hour of labor is. So no, a rebarrel isn’t a huge deal on an x bolt. It’s a bigger deal than something like a Tikka or a Savage, but not a huge deal by any means.On an Xbolt? I have been told otherwise
Good to know and thank you! I really appreciate the info!!It’s not as simple/straightforward as something like a Tikka, but it’s possible to re-barrel any action essentially unless it’s a press fit barreled action assembly. The x bolt is a threaded assembly, so it can be rebarreled. It’s more difficult because it has a finer thread pitch than other rifles, but totally doable. You can order a stainless replacement barrel for your x bolt from McGowan up in Montana for $377, I just checked. Then you’d pay a smith to spin your old one off and torque the replacement on, probably $100-ish is my guess, whatever an hour of labor is. So no, a rebarrel isn’t a huge deal on an x bolt. It’s a bigger deal than something like a Tikka or a Savage, but not a huge deal by any means.
That's a ridiculous analogy. APCs full of sheep don't tell a damn thing about how a hunting bullet kills. We aren't shooting supersonic sabots if depleted uranium at animals. Ask any guide in the West, and they'll tell you of elk walking off and never being found from 300WM shots under 50 yards. Plenty of energy, poor bullet choices most likely. Energy isn't killing anything unless it's from a blast overpressure. A properly placed, properly designed bullet delivered within the recommended minimum fps needed for proper upset is what kills animals.I’ll give you a couple explanations.
One includes many experts who are misinterpreting newtons law talking about equal and opposite reactions. They’ll tell you it matters not in animals however when we look at jell targets, the internal wound channel of fast and energetic projectiles is massive because of the energy displacing the jell. That energy ruptures blood vessels, and blows organs open or what hunters call “a pile of mush”. A single bullet hole that does not contain any energy would not do more than poking a single hole in something. Does the hole cause death, sometimes. Take an APDST round from a tank.
We know from military testing that high speed rounds that do not expand penetrate armor very effectively and make a hole. That in itself does not kill a tank. The kinetic ENERGY it produces causes massive shrapnel and internal damage. Killing the people and causing everything in the tank to melt down and sometimes ignite. Testing was done in 113’s filled with sheep. Human and animals bodies are 70% water, the internal shock wave carrying the kinetic energy from the round caused massive damage without the bullet making a hole in each of the sheep. Dead sheep
Energy matters.