"For every 7mm bullet you’d shoot, there’s a lighter bullet in 6.5 that will do the same thing in flight and on impact with approximately 20% less recoil. 20% is noticeable for the average guy, and even more so for someone packing a physical injury."The contradiction in the above two statements speaks for itself, but thank you for finally acknowledging my point. There is no 100 gr option in that bullet class for 7mm, which is exactly why a 6.5mm caliber is an advantage when recoil is a primary consideration. For ANY type of bullet in 7mm, there's a lighter equivalent option in 6.5mm (or .257/.243/.224) that will do the same job.
It's a physics-based fact that lighter bullets at similar velocity = less recoil. You acknowledge this relationship when comparing .243 to .264 bullets, as well as the equal weights = worse ballistics in larger calibers relationship when comparing .284 to .308 bullets. An individual that's not attached to the emotional aspects of 6.5 Creedmoor vs 7mm-08 comparison should realize the same relationships hold true there as well. Arguing over 2grs of powder mass difference (not all of which is even moving at muzzle velocity) is a Red Herring in a world where a 20gr bullet mass difference is the average between the two calibers.
For every 7mm bullet you’d shoot, there’s a lighter bullet in 6.5 that will do the same thing in flight and on impact with approximately 20% less recoil. 20% is noticeable for the average guy, and even more so for someone packing a physical injury.
So, in that calculation would you put the 7mm-08 139 LRX up against the 6.5 CM 127 LRX? Basically you are getting the same in flight and on impact?