- Thread Starter
- #41
lyle_destroys
WKR
The stock wooden stock. HaWhat stock do you have?
The stock wooden stock. HaWhat stock do you have?
Honestly I would be happier with a 12lb rifle, even more would be ok. I will sit down and shoot 20-50 in an afternoon, but I would still like to take long shots on deer. I wont be hiking up and down mountains with it. So I guess a lightweight carbon barrel isnt the way to go.
Man I like that! What does it weigh as it sits right now? I have plenty of walking around/hiking rifles. Bench and blind is a good description of what Im looking to do. And what chassis is that?Hell, if you're good with that weight, I'd say get a 6.5mm sendero (or one of the palmas) steel barrel, throw it in a chassis of your choosing and go to town.
I did a very similar thing with the goal of making a bench-and-blind-only rifle in 6.5CM with a leftover 700 action, Bartlein medium palma barrel and an XLR element chassis. It is indeed hefty, but as a result it's a joy to shoot all day and easy to shoot well. I love the chassis more than any of my conventional stocks (I'd put them on more rifles if it wasn't for the weight!).
Man I like that! What does it weigh as it sits right now? I have plenty of walking around/hiking rifles. Bench and blind is a good description of what Im looking to do. And what chassis is that?
Lots of people have opinions, not a lot of people have real world experience.
My Smith has built several on short actions and is in the process of building me one right now. You could run one on a Remington short action with a longer mag box, that being said, all my experience is with custom rifles.
It's definitely been recommended to be run in medium to long actions. Short actions that measure longer like a M70 WSM will work, but my gunsmith didn't recommend going shorter. Otherwise he recommended going long action.
Good discussion, though.
If I was going to chamber a 6.5 PRC in a long action, I'd just run a 264 win or 6.5-06..
I agree with you on having too many options! I have a .257 roberts that loves killing whitetail does. Ive been debating on ackley improving it but its so accurate I dont really want to mess with it right now. I think the quarter bores are underated big time.If I were to choose strictly a whitetail gun, it would be a 257 weatherby. Extremely flat shooting, only downside is spendy to get into as brass isn't the cheapest. That said I love my 7mm-08s and there are just a lot of good options these days. Maybe even too many ha
I agree with you on having too many options! I have a .257 roberts that loves killing whitetail does. Ive been debating on ackley improving it but its so accurate I dont really want to mess with it right now. I think the quarter bores are underated big time.
Ill bet that of this happens other companies will follow suite, high bc .257s will be the next big thing. Here comes the .250prcThere is a new quarter bore hunting bullet getting developed right now. It will be over 130 grains. And my understanding is it will need a 1:7 twist to stabilize it. I am thinking it must be over 140 grains.
Ill bet that of this happens other companies will follow suite, high bc .257s will be the next big thing. Here comes the .250prc
NSS and criterion prices are great for a custom barrel. Another compa y ive been looking at is Patriot Valley pre-fits. They use Rock Creek blanks and seem to be top notch, but cost more.Grab a Criterion from NSS and a barrel nut. I bought one years ago in 260Rem at 28”. Straight taper and it’s heavy but no recoil. It shoots well, you won’t be disappointed.