AckleymanII
Gold $$ Contributor
500 with the proper set up. Scope with knobs, range finder. You may consider the 115g Berger vld hunting, heck of a bullet as My nephews and brother found out this year!
Yep I had 2, .25-06s in 1973. Traded the thin barrel for a heavy barreld varmint model 700. Shot one deer with it, mostly used for coyotes and rock chucks. I just took the barrel off a few months back and used the old 25-06 Remington long action to make a .308 on a long action to feed really long bullets out of the magazine. Don't miss the 25-06. Still have 25 cal bullets, dies, and a bunch of new brass for that caliber. Only one of my rifles or handguns has ever fired a factory round, and that was one 300RUM to get brass case head expansion data to hand load the cartridge with RL 25 the other 19 cartridges are still in tbe box. Never even fired a factory 9mm or 223/ 5.56 rd. Everything was hand loaded...so I have no ammo shortage, and never forgot to take my ammo on a hunting trip. There is always 308 ammo everywhere and it will do all the hunting needs in the lower 48. I even find live 9mm, 223, 22 lr and 308 rds out in the woods where people are shooting and drop a few rounds on the ground.First off, I am a big fan of the 25 cal. Bought my 25-06 in 1973. It does not have serious recoil up to 120 grain bullets. I don't know what they are like with the 130+ grain bullets. You will need at least an 8 twist for the heavies. For up to 120 gr, a 9 twist is the bees knees.
However finding 25-06 ammo at a stop and go in Montana may be a problem.
To meet the requirements, my suggestion is the un-cool 30-06. AND PUT A MUZZLE BRAKE ON IT. I have never been a fan of brakes, but they work. I have recently got my own 30-06. An old school Rem 700 ADL, Put a new barrel on it with a brake. It is still in the break in/load development stage. I bought some 150's and a great guy gave me some 125 Sierras and with the muzzle brake it is like shooting a 243 off the bench. 125's at 3000 fps would be a great whitetail load out to 300 yards. There is a huge selection of 30 cal bullets for all purposes including elk, and still getting a velocity above 2800 fps. Forgetting your ammo shouldn't be a problem with the 06.
To build a 260 or 6.5x55 you are still looking at a long action for magazine purposes. Even with a 140 grain bullet seated out. If you decide on a 6.5x55, you know where a reamer is. Then there is the ammo availability problem
I have a cousin here in Texas that wants me to build him a custom rifle. He has shoulder issues and wants a little less recoil for Elk, mule deer and hogs. His brother has a 25-06 and expounds endlessly about the virtues of the cartridge. I’ve been studying my books.
The 25-06 launches a 117 grain bullet at 3000 FPS. Woohoo! So can a .243, a 6xc, 6.5-55 ! My 6.5-47 launches a 123 at 2950.
Am I missing something? It seems to me there are some great modern cartridges that use a lot less powder in a short action, with the same performance.
Opinions wanted. I just don’t get it.
I’m thinking 243 as a suggestion. Maybe a 260 or 6.5-55.
That's what I shoot in my 25.06 for coyotes. When they hit...Oh my goodness!!How many guns shoot a 75 grain, at 3600 fps?
Guess I will have to disagree. I certainly don't feel that a 25-06 is under powered for deer.I have a couple 25-06 rifles and shot a deer with 115 gr nos bal tip.
I find 25-06 underpowered. I prefer 6.5-06, 270, 280AI, and 7mmRemMag for shooting deer.
I will have to disagree. I certainly don't feel that a 25-06 is under powered for deer.
Then again I have killed them with 20 & 12 gauge shotguns, 30-30, 223, 243, & 6 Dasher. My wife uses .223 exclusively. I think 360 yards is my longest shot. With my 25-06 I could stretch it considerably further should the opportunity present itself.Guess I will have to disagree. I certainly don't feel that a 25-06 is under powered for deer.
243 Win is the best Coyote medicine invented! Not that the 25-06 wont get the job done. 22-250 is a great Coyote round on a calm day. 223 Rem is good Coyote medicine on a calm day as well!That's what I shoot in my 25.06 for coyotes. When they hit...Oh my goodness!!
An off the rack rifle in a short action will have trouble staying above 3000 fps with a 120 grain bullet. Not saying it can't be done, but it would be a custom with handloads probably.I have a cousin here in Texas that wants me to build him a custom rifle. He has shoulder issues and wants a little less recoil for Elk, mule deer and hogs. His brother has a 25-06 and expounds endlessly about the virtues of the cartridge. I’ve been studying my books.
The 25-06 launches a 117 grain bullet at 3000 FPS. Woohoo! So can a .243, a 6xc, 6.5-55 ! My 6.5-47 launches a 123 at 2950.
Am I missing something? It seems to me there are some great modern cartridges that use a lot less powder in a short action, with the same performance.
Opinions wanted. I just don’t get it.
I’m thinking 243 as a suggestion. Maybe a 260 or 6.5-55.
Absolutely but if one blows the shoulder forward at 40 degrees on the 243 oh my it will light a fire under the 115 gr. DTACs and push them @ 3200 fps.An off the rack rifle in a short action will have trouble staying above 3000 fps with a 120 grain bullet. Not saying it can't be done, but it would be a custom with handloads probably.
Drop 30 grains off the bullet weight and things change considerably.