I have in fact seen a creedmoor fired multiple times thru a 308. A brand new savage that was in the wrong box bought from academy. The bolt was very hard to close but after 15 or so shots not hitting a target at 50yds they asked for my help. It didnt sound right going off but was forming very nice 308 cases. So i can assure you a 6.5creed will in fact fire in a factory new 308 chamber
Aint buyin itDusty
What do you think about a 600 yd hit?
No he had to beat it closedI’d trust your observations at the range that day. My empty fired brass was certainly not a smaller shoulder than it had been as a loaded round.
But this would be my question, when you say that “the bolt was very hard to close” can we specify how hard, a bit more?
There have been rounds where I’d tend to use my thumb on the cocking piece before pushing down the handle, and at a much further extreme I have seen guys tap the bolt closed then down, with an object.
Was the bolt closable by just wrestling with the handle?
Know a guy who did the same thing, no harm to shooter or rifle (verified by gunsmith) only damage was a 308 case that was almost straight wall.Mix ups can be disastrous. A friend in the heat of the moment fired a .308 in a .270. Blew most of the center out of the stock. Plenty of wood splinters in the face and left and arm. No permanent injuries to the shooter.
No mater how long we've been doing this sometimes we can use a stiff dose of "slow down and be careful"!
I said that was a mistake, the spotter said it was a hit but after I left my instructor said the spotter wasn't so sure anymore.Dusty
What do you think about a 600 yd hit?
When you fired the three or four shots was the bolt hard to close or did the marine close the bolt every time?Actually, now I remember more. It was me who loaded the magazine and I fired three or four shots that didn't land which surprised us all because I'm a decent shot. That's when my instructor said to let him get on the gun and see what's wrong. He took one shot and said something's wrong and then looked at the spent cartridge and realized I was shooting the wrong cartridge. So actually this happened three or four times because those were all 6.5cm rounds. My spotter, the ranch owner, was wrong about landing on steel 600 yards away, he told my instructor after I had left, after my instructor expressed doubt about that. The owner doesn't have the greatest scope.
I think I'm mistaken about firing three or four 6.5cm's before. I think he took the one and only shot of 6.5 out of a new mag because I didn't have any trouble closing the bolt but there was something not right so he got on the gun.When you fired the three or four shots was the bolt hard to close or did the marine close the bolt every time?
I have a very tight chambered 6.5 CM so I just had to try this. The bolt would stop a good 1/4 inch from going closed. It would take a lot of force to get it to close if you could even get it to close.Curiosity was killing me so I got out my Rem 700 in 308 and a 6 CM and a 6.5 CM empty case. Neither would get close enough to even start to let the bolt close. Lugs were out at least 1/4 inch. I'm with the crowd calling BS.
I would think not. I don't see any show of that from the targets you posted. That could have been, "just that day".Could this damage the rifle? They didn't think so. I don't reload so I don't know the issues involved with the misfit of the cartridge. Rifle is a Steyr SSG 08 A1.
My 6.5 Creedmoor ammo will fire in my 308 rifle.Yep, I tried it... the 6.5 Creedmoor case is to wide to chamber in a 308 chamber...wasn't even close in 3 different 308wins I own...the bolt is way out of battery like 1/4". So you can be safe owing both calibers without concern...nice to know..