MarkS
Silver $$ Contributor
"As far as accuracy, nothing can outshoot the 6mmBR and 6mm IMP's"![]()
They hold all but one record in IBS 600 Benchrest, and have set many before the current records, 3 were set by me with a 6mmBRX.
Mark Schronce
"As far as accuracy, nothing can outshoot the 6mmBR and 6mm IMP's"![]()
Yes, and typically a better blood trail, too. This debate is ageless though and it just is what it is. We aren't going to settle it on here.Agreed. I know 6mm will work just fine on deer. I have killed them with a 243 when I was young. But I do prefer a minimum caliber of 6.5mm for hunting game big game animals. I just personally like the heavier bullet offerings of the 6.5 and larger calibers for that extra punch. The higher BC's of the larger caliber heavy bullets also help to maintain that energy much better down range.
For some reason MOAB comes to mind, though.For the typical hunting in the U.S. bullet weight matters very little, as long as you are using a suitable caliber with enough SD, proper bullet construction for the type of animal you are hunting, and most of all, proper bullet placement on the animal. "Bigger is better" was the military and African game hunters way of thinking just a hundred years or so ago. My, how things have changed since then
Though it would be nice, bench rest accuracy for hunting isn't necessary. The properly placed first shot is the one that counts, and the target area on a deer offers room for less than bench rest accuracy.
I have plenty of rifles in plenty of calibers to focus on every aspect of “hunting”. I don’t have any target rifles or calibers, but I also don’t target/competition shoot, nor do I foresee doing that in the best future. Although this varmit target competition does look pretty cool. Im any outdoors man and get into a lot of different things. I have a truck gun or two for taking those coyotes out when I see them on the road while working. (Contractor, I live out of my truck) so yes I would love to shoot and piddling and fill a second huge safe full of guns for different things. Plus I just like cool guns. But I want a caliber, that I can spend the time I do have on. That can fill the role of a couple three different rifles in one gun. Three or four different loads billet combos. I love the idea of a switch barrel gun too. Always wanted one. But I’m not trying to complicate the point of this OP. So keep the chatter coming so I can figure out a good round to accomplish this with. I used to do a lot of deer hunting with my 223. Aimed for the ear. In my younger years I looked at it like a clean kill or a clean miss. And no wasted meat. But I was hunting at a buddies farm one day and helping him cull some does and saw where someone doing the same thing I was, hit a doe in the lower jaw and she could not eat. Looked terrible. And was going to die of starvation if I hadn’t been there to kill her. So from then on I haven’t done that again. However I believe a 6mm/.243 is ample to kill a deer with proper shot placement. I’m not by any mean stating that this is the size bullet I’m settling on but I’m not going to rule that out. Others did state that 6.5 is min. state requirements in their states, which is good to keep in mind if I travel with rifle to hunt.No one cartridge does everything well. And it would be a pretty boring life if something like this did exist. Every cartridge out there from .243 to .30-06 can shoot to 600 yards, has varmint bullets available and is capable of taking down a deer.
You have to take into account the rifle that is going to shoot it too. There are rifles designed for bench rest shooting, varmint shooting, light weight for hunting lots of acres. Heavy barrels, light barrels and med barrels.
Good luck. This is one of the reasons my safe has varmint rifles, stalking rifles, target rifles and lever action for dense woods, all in different cartridges. A do-it-all rifle may do it all but there will be some sacrifice involved.
One of my teachers had a saying "You don't get something for nothing", which seems to apply to a lot of things in life.
You may find a happy medium. But as soon as you do one of your friends will come up with a hunt that leaves you wondering about your choice. I have the Tshirt and a few rifles to verify this.
SD = Sectional Density.A couple of questions: what is SD? From JRS reply?
"My, how things have changed." ... yes they have.. I would pose this: what if those "friendly nice young men" in Chicago were using varmint boolits to settle their disagreements? What do you think the mortality rate would be then?
Not sure you guys, but I think this cold weather has me just about over the edge. Luckily I get to drive to FL tomorrow for business.
You learned me something new.SD = Sectional Density.
Jack O'Conner loved the .270 for the most part due to the SD of the .270. A .270 130 grain bullet has roughly the same SD as a 165 grain .30 caliber bullet. If the same critter were shot with both bullets, they would each penetrate the same distance, but the .270 wouldn't kick nearly as much. For a 6.5 bullet to equal the SD of a 25 caliber 115 grain bullet, the 6.5 bullet would have to weight roughly 130 grains, which results in more recoil, and both would penetrate the same distance.
The twist rates would be different, as would the powder you burn. A 120 grain 25 caliber bullet has a SD of 260based on above data... what cartridge will push a 6.5mm 160 gr bullet as well as a varmit bullet. Or is that even possible with rifle twist rate? Bc that “SD” is higher than a .338
I have plenty of rifles in plenty of calibers to focus on every aspect of “hunting”. I don’t have any target rifles or calibers, but I also don’t target/competition shoot, nor do I foresee doing that in the best future. Although this varmit target competition does look pretty cool. Im any outdoors man and get into a lot of different things. I have a truck gun or two for taking those coyotes out when I see them on the road while working. (Contractor, I live out of my truck) so yes I would love to shoot and piddling and fill a second huge safe full of guns for different things. Plus I just like cool guns. But I want a caliber, that I can spend the time I do have on. That can fill the role of a couple three different rifles in one gun. Three or four different loads billet combos. I love the idea of a switch barrel gun too. Always wanted one. But I’m not trying to complicate the point of this OP. So keep the chatter coming so I can figure out a good round to accomplish this with. I used to do a lot of deer hunting with my 223. Aimed for the ear. In my younger years I looked at it like a clean kill or a clean miss. And no wasted meat. But I was hunting at a buddies farm one day and helping him cull some does and saw where someone doing the same thing I was, hit a doe in the lower jaw and she could not eat. Looked terrible. And was going to die of starvation if I hadn’t been there to kill her. So from then on I haven’t done that again. However I believe a 6mm/.243 is ample to kill a deer with proper shot placement. I’m not by any mean stating that this is the size bullet I’m settling on but I’m not going to rule that out. Others did state that 6.5 is min. state requirements in their states, which is good to keep in mind if I travel with rifle to hunt.
As you've likely found, or already knew...SD is a way of quantifying a bullet of a given weight and length's ability to penetrate well. The 6.5 cal bullets are generally very good here, as are the 7mm bullets. Of course, bullet construction plays a pretty big role in this too.You learned me something new.
Just looked this up...
.264" (6.5mm) 160 grain, SD .328
Wow! And as a comparison
.277" (.270) 140 grain, SD .261
.277" (.270) 150 grain, SD .279
.284" (7mm) 150 grain, SD .266
.284" (7mm) 154 grain, SD .273
.284" (7mm) 160 grain, SD .283
.308" (7.62mm) 170 grain, SD .256
.308" (7.62mm) 180 grain, SD .271
.312" (.303) 180 grain, SD .266
.323" (8mm) 200 grain, SD .274
.338" (.338) 200 grain, SD .250
.338" (.338) 210 grain, SD .263
.338" (.338) 225 grain, SD .281
Ok. That makes sense, as they make some very heavy for caliber bullets and cater to the "really" big game market...like cape buffalo and shit. I didn't look at the price but I bet they're not priced like most everything else. None of their bullets are.Woodleigh makes 6.5s in 160 grain weight. I shot them out of 6.5x47, 6.5-284 and they shot for crap. Twist was too slow.
http://www.woodleighbullets.com.au/bullet-lists/traditional/264-333-list