Someone smart?I can’t vote. The best single cartridge isn’t listed. Who does a one and done thread about rifles and leaves out the 30/06?
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Someone smart?I can’t vote. The best single cartridge isn’t listed. Who does a one and done thread about rifles and leaves out the 30/06?
If you say so.Someone smart?
I can’t vote. The best single cartridge isn’t listed. Who does a one and done thread about rifles and leaves out the 30/06?
Because I have spinal degeneration, a titanium rod in my neck, and torn up shoulders. My 30-06 was sold after I shot it the last time. Haha.I can’t vote. The best single cartridge isn’t listed. Who does a one and done thread about rifles and leaves out the 30/06?
If you have to elaborate on how it's clear, it's not clear![]()
I think you’d be fine with 120gr TTSX on elk. I have shot more than a dozen elk with 6.5 Creedmoor with 127gr LRX and 140-143gr bergers and eldx, as well as 6cm with 75gr tipped hammer hunter. All practically DRT. These were all cow elk, but I do not think results would differ appreciably on a bull.I have some 120 Barnes TTSX in 7mm that could be a good pill for elk. I know they are for deer. I just have not done much testing with them.
That’s why I take a 7magWould you also not gamble on a 270 Win for elk?
6mm class has quickly become a favorite for me.None of the above. 6 Creedmoor.
You’re still cherry picking. Is there a magical line at 1/4 mile where Ballistic Coefficient starts taking effect?
No there is not.
To retain the same velocity at 440yds with a 7mm bullet of the same weight of an equivalent 6.5mm bullet, you have to start the 7mm bullet 50-100fps faster due to the poorer ballistic coefficient. That takes more powder, and more muzzle velocity, resulting in about a 10% bump in recoil for the same on ballistic performance at 1/4 mile. Muzzle velocity is irrelevant unless you’re shooting animals in cages. At every point beyond that, the 7mm is falling further behind. A slight reduction in powder mass/momentum is totally washed away by the velocity delta required at the start to get them to perform the same downrange. This is pedantic at this point, because as you mentioned, they’re BOTH overkill for the intended application. However, the 7mm-08 is slightly more overkill, and comes with measurably increased recoil to accompany that.
There’s just enough sciency sounding stuff here to throw up a smoke screen, so here’s one last attempt to cut through it:
For any bullet you’d fire from a 7mm-08, there’s a ~20gr lighter option that has the same exterior and terminal ballistics with significantly reduced recoil in the 6.5. That includes the 100gr .264 Ballistic Tip, for which there is no equivalent weight 7mm variant.
Well I dropped it two days and three pages ago so...right back atcha?Case in point: Steve, and or you and the boys need to slow it down, read and comprehend. The fact your still arguing a point in which is fallible is silly and telling at the same time.
Go hunt man, don't die on this hill.
We will still be here when you get back![]()
You can of course, get even lighter bullets in a 6.5 than you can in a 7mm-08, but south of 120 grains, both cartridges are shooting varmint and target bullets mostly, so practically speaking, 120 grains is about the floor for hunting bullets (not counting barnes/solids, but I would not hunt with those, so I don't count them).
To say "well, there's this 100 grain bullet I could shoot in a 6.5 you don't have an equivalent in 7mm" is the very definition of cherry picking. So, ok, if you wanna limit yourself to a 100 grain bullet to hunt deer, then 6.5 is your huckleberry (but a 243 would be even better at that).
I think I mentioned it earlier in this thread, but my 6.5x55 is very pleasant to shoot with 100gr HHTs. I also have some 80gr 6.5mm HHTs, but I haven't run any of them down the barrel yet. Given some expected deviation in bullet placement for my iron sight hunt this year, I opted for the 130gr Accubond for a little more insurance on terminal performance over the lighter recoiling monolithics. A 100gr or 120gr ELDM or 107gr SMK would probably have been even better, but I ran out of time to experiment with them this year.I am truly amazed at the response for the 6.5 CM over the others. Fantastic information on bullet selection, weight, velocity, and recoil. It gives me some good test data. I am planning on selling 3-4 of the rifles listed and focus on testing the 7mm-08 and the 6.5 with different monolithic bullets.
It seems my dream of an elk hunt is happening from a gentleman who saw my thread. His organization hosts disabled veterans in ID. We are working on an elk hunt for next year, so after deer season, I gotta get busy. Just hoping my health hangs in long enough. Been a rough few months and docs cannot do anything but treat pain.
I wondered the same thing so didn't vote. 30-06 is so clearly superior to 308 makes you wonder.I can’t vote. The best single cartridge isn’t listed. Who does a one and done thread about rifles and leaves out the 30/06?