Maybe, but the 7's are far and away a better choice when it comes to bc.For instance, 280 AI gets the same performance w same bullets as 7 rem mag, w less recoil. Even a plain ol' 270 is within 100 FPS of the 7rm for the same bullet weights.
This statement is not true. My 7mm mag pushes the 160 grain Nosler Accubonds at 3100 fps mv. It pushed 150 grain ballistic tips a tad over 3200 fps. I am not very knowledgeable on the 280 AI, but the 270 will not stay within 100 fps of this, safely.For instance, 280 AI gets the same performance w same bullets as 7 rem mag, w less recoil. Even a plain ol' 270 is within 100 FPS of the 7rm for the same bullet weights.
Please see post #8.This statement is not true. My 7mm mag pushes the 160 grain Nosler Accubonds at 3100 fps mv. It pushed 150 grain ballistic tips a tad over 3200 fps. I am not very knowledgeable on the 280 AI, but the 270 will not stay within 100 fps of this, safely.
Well said sir. I like it.7mm mag is a near perfect caliber, especially for Western hunting. I've owned, shot, and loaded for a lot of 7's. They just perform. They beat 30's in BC all day, beat .277 and 6.5 in frontal diameter and usually retained energy. I've killed lots of critters with 7mm08, 280, and 7mm mag. It's hard to beat the confidence a 7mm mag allows you to have on a long cross-canyon shot on elk. The satisfying report of a 160-175 bullet hitting home is hard to beat. There's always gonna be the under-informed fanboy spouting anecdotal trash about a .270 or something similar being "equal" to a 7 mag, but ballistics and physics don't lie. The 7 mag is a solid choice for big game hunting, and more effective than most other calibers minus the big 30's.