No one shoots a .270 win anymore it seems but consider it unless you plan on shooting way to far
Uh oh… you’ve opened the box.bringing the rule of thumb 1500 ft lbs for elk
Oh it'll kill them. Might be the next day, might never find them. But it'll kill em.I haven’t read the whole 223 thread but,…. You’re kidding right??
Spine shots or forget it IMO with the .223 On bigger critters.Oh it'll kill them. Might be the next day, might never find them. But it'll kill em.
Nearly all of those problems are solved by a mediocre suppressor.Lots of choices. If recoil is the main concern, a 6 Creedmoor shooting 103 ELD-X or 108 ELD-M is the easy solution.
A 6.5 Creedmoor running any slippery bullet from 140 - 156gr should take care of you out to 600 yards with minimal recoil. Mine likes both the 142gr ABLR and the 147gr ELD-M. Those two bullets are all I'd ever need to do anything you're asking.
A 6.5 PRC running 143gr or higher improves on the Creedmoor's distance by another 100 yards or a bit more, although it won't have noticeably different recoil than your .30-'06.
The 6.8 Western is an awesome design that gets you even more bullet weight with about the same felt recoil as the 6.5 PRC. Bullets from 162 - 175gr fly flat and long and buck the wind and pack a punch upon arrival. Near the 6.5 PRC to approximating some of the smaller 7mm mags out there in the recoil department, this is about as big as I would personally go. This cartridge is a newbie so it doesn't have quite the support of the 6.5 Creedmoor or 6.5 PRC, but the support it does have is from Winchester and Browning, so you feel assured of good factory ammo supplies and a way to get brass.
A 7 PRC is what I would get if I could handle recoil well. With 175 - 180gr pills flying a bit faster than the 6.8 Western can launch them, it is a legit cartridge for almost any sane distance. It has a bit too much recoil for me, however, and I don't think I'd be as accurate with it as I would need to be to take advantage of its merits.
A ton of people use the various .300 mags and even larger. Having used several, I don't really find a need for them with the added recoil, weight and noise. If that is the girl you have your eye on, however, go for it. They will certainly get the job done.
If I were you, if you are wanting to keep two rifles and actually hunt with both of them, I'd go 6.5 Creed or even 6 Creed. Once you get into the 6.5 PRC and 6.8 Western the old '06 starts to look like too much of a redundancy with fewer and fewer reasons to choose it (at least that is how I would look at it). The one thing the '06 will always have going for it over the rest is that factory ammo for it will be a helluva lot cheaper (other than maybe the 6.5 Creedmoor)!
Yup. Big cost of time, money, weight, overall length of the rifle and velocity.Nearly all of those problems are solved by a mediocre suppressor.
Except cost.
Where do you get your replacement barrel(s)?I currently have a replacement barrel in my safe ready to spin on, and if I continue shooting at the current rate I am with that rifle,
I bought a factory stainless lite takeoff from a member on here, that’s the one that’s in my safe right now. When I put it on I’ll just buy another factory takeoff of some flavor from somewhere like JA Outdoors or even on eBay or on here. Every one I’ve seen on any of those places has been between $100 and $200, and I only paid $120 for mine.Where do you get your replacement barrel(s)?
Thanks.I bought a factory stainless lite takeoff from a member on here, that’s the one that’s in my safe right now. When I put it on I’ll just buy another factory takeoff of some flavor from somewhere like JA Outdoors or even on eBay or on here. Every one I’ve seen on any of those places has been between $100 and $200, and I only paid $120 for mine.
Otherwise, I would buy a shouldered prefit from preferred barrels out of southern Utah
What were your four 6.5 PRC’s and which one(s) were your standouts? I’m looking at that caliber for my next purchase as well.6.5 PRC would be a great next cartridge. Great components if you decide to hand load also. Velocities aren't great with factory ammo so I'd error on the 24" barrel side. The factory ammo, 147 ELDM will kill anything out to 600 yards pretty well.
I've had four 6.5 PRC's, two 28 Noslers, and four 300 Norma Mag Improved rifles. For what you’re asking, the 6.5 PRC is good to go.
I think barrel life is something to consider. If you have a 1000 rnds barrel life when the barrel is broke in you are already at 20% of its optimal life. If you practice a bit at the range with your hunting rifle or if you do some load developement, zero check after hunts and after your rifle takes rain and you have to disassemble it for maintenance, you can easily shoot 100 rounds every year and in 8 years after the break in your barrel is gone. You can swap the barrel but then you have to break in the barrel again and find again a load it likes? Undoable? No. Necessary for the small advantage for most hunter's use of a hunting rifle? No. In my opinion it is worth only for rigs intended for shots past 500 yards or for hunting very though animals.I love when barrel life is spoken about. How many people are actually going to shoot their hunting rifle that much?
I think barrel life is something to consider. If you have a 1000 rnds barrel life when the barrel is broke in you are already at 20% of its optimal life.