Narrowed down new mountain rifle

Mudshack

FNG
Joined
Jan 23, 2025
Messages
1
I have been a whitetail hunter for 40 years. Have used mainly my Browning BLR in .308. Now that I live in Colorado, I am changing ALL of my equipment to lighter and longer shooting gear. It's crazy what a different kind of hunting gear is needed.

So....I have my mountain rifles narrowed down to the following in either .300wm or 7PRC

Browning X-Bolt 2 Speed
Bergara Wilderness Sierra
CVA Cascade LRH
Tikka T3X Lite (.300wm only option)

Thoughts?
 

TheYukiYama

Lil-Rokslider
Joined
Nov 10, 2023
Messages
108
I bought a tikka t3x lite in 300wm from SW last summer. I like it a lot. I’m no expert long range shooter but was shooting sub moa straight away and got better through the first 40 rounds.
That being said, my dad who is a damn good shot had trouble with it, likely due to recoil. Ammo is also fairly expensive. I’m extremely happy with my decision but could understand if people recommend something smaller.
I don’t have experience with any 7prc but love the 7mm and it’s supposed to be a bit better 🤷🏻‍♂️

You could spend a lifetime trying to decide between options, but the truth is these are all fine choices and you’ll be in a great spot regardless as long as you do some practice.
 

TaperPin

WKR
Joined
Jul 12, 2023
Messages
3,814
It’s always a good idea to move up in recoil gradually - for that reason I’d always suggest the 7 mag. Once you’ve owned a 7 mag for a season then it’s less risky to get a 300.
 

huntnful

WKR
Joined
Oct 10, 2020
Messages
2,551
Of your options I’d definitely go 7 PRC. You don’t need the added recoil, or shittier ballistics of the 300 WM. I’m not that familiar with the factory offerings, but brownings seem to be a decently built, as well as a decent shooting rifle from what I’ve seen.
 
Joined
Dec 15, 2019
Messages
542
Location
Alaska
If you've limited it to just the things you have here, then I'd consider the following:

I have been a whitetail hunter for 40 years. Have used mainly my Browning BLR in .308. Now that I live in Colorado, I am changing ALL of my equipment to lighter and longer shooting gear. It's crazy what a different kind of hunting gear is needed.

So....I have my mountain rifles narrowed down to the following in either .300wm or 7PRC

Browning X-Bolt 2 Speed
Bergara Wilderness Sierra
CVA Cascade LRH
Tikka T3X Lite (.300wm only option)

Thoughts?
 

jonesn3

WKR
Joined
Jan 11, 2022
Messages
301
I’m certainly not here to claim 300WM is ballistically superior, but I ended up going with the 300WM primarily due to cost and availability of factory ammo in my area. I have all the equipment to reload, but with two kiddos under two year old, time for reloading wasn’t high on the priority list. PRC or Nosler cartridges were crazy expensive, 7PRC wasn’t on the market yet a couple years ago, and I do like 30cal. With a muzzle break recoil is really tame in my gun. For those reasons I went with a somewhat lightweight carbon barrel 300WM.
 

huntnful

WKR
Joined
Oct 10, 2020
Messages
2,551
I’m certainly not here to claim 300WM is ballistically superior, but I ended up going with the 300WM primarily due to cost and availability of factory ammo in my area. I have all the equipment to reload, but with two kiddos under two year old, time for reloading wasn’t high on the priority list. PRC or Nosler cartridges were crazy expensive, 7PRC wasn’t on the market yet a couple years ago, and I do like 30cal. With a muzzle break recoil is really tame in my gun. For those reasons I went with a somewhat lightweight carbon barrel 300WM.
Oh I'd have no problem hunting with one! I just loaded 208 ELDM's in one at 2850FPS. Those would kill anything easily.

Just in comparison, it is a lot of extra recoil, with no ballistic advantage.
 

jonesn3

WKR
Joined
Jan 11, 2022
Messages
301
Understandable. I have a buddy considering a 7PRC in a chassis gun, folding stock and carbon barreled, cool setup!

Before I got that WM, I did some “theoretical” recoil energy calcs for a few different models and cartridges, also compared to a few rifles I have in the safe, just for reference. On paper the recoil had a little concerned, but the muzzle break makes a big difference and tames the recoil to the point I was pleasantly surprised. I had been using a couple Pre-64 M70 rifles in 30-06 and 338WM (gifts, hand-me-downs) with hard plate recoil “pads” on the stocks. Those rifles definitely had some recoil in comparison. Granted the muzzle break on the 300WM isn’t all that fun to be next to at the gun range, and it will set off truck alarms in the parking lot, but it works great and I’m happy with it.

@huntnful - that 208gr bullet seems nice, what twist do you need to get that stable?
 

huntnful

WKR
Joined
Oct 10, 2020
Messages
2,551
Understandable. I have a buddy considering a 7PRC in a chassis gun, folding stock and carbon barreled, cool setup!

Before I got that WM, I did some “theoretical” recoil energy calcs for a few different models and cartridges, also compared to a few rifles I have in the safe, just for reference. On paper the recoil had a little concerned, but the muzzle break makes a big difference and tames the recoil to the point I was pleasantly surprised. I had been using a couple Pre-64 M70 rifles in 30-06 and 338WM (gifts, hand-me-downs) with hard plate recoil “pads” on the stocks. Those rifles definitely had some recoil in comparison. Granted the muzzle break on the 300WM isn’t all that fun to be next to at the gun range, and it will set off truck alarms in the parking lot, but it works great and I’m happy with it.

That 208gr bullet seems nice, what twist do you need to get that stable?
Oh yeah, I have heavier recoiling rifles and the muzzle brakes make a night and day difference!!

9 twist will stabilize them for sure. That’s what I shot them in. But I think an even slower twist will still work
 
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