Twodogs10mm said:
I'm doing a 6.5 Rem mag build on a savage long action and would be interested in seeing it. I'm getting ready to order the barrel and still need to figure out how long to make the throat. I plan on shooting 140gr berger or others. Does yours still shoot the lighter shorter bullet weights?
Thanks Doug
I have a 6.5 Rem Mag on a Savage 116 long action and shoot the 140gr Berger VLD's at over 3130 fps from a 26" barrel with a long throat chambering. Had the 140's going 3210 fps, but case life was short and that brass is hard to come by unless you form it from 7mm Mag.
I have had this rifle for about 5 years now and it is my main hunting rifle. Killed over a dozen animals with it from 80 yards to 655 yards. Even used it in 10 shot 1000 yard BR comp during one event for fun. Have a load that can shoot under 1/2" at 200 yards using 51gr of RL-17.
The long throat is nice for getting maximum case capacity to "hot rod" the round and get maximum energy at long range when hunting. BUT>>> The 6.5 Rem Mag will wear the throat and lands down quickly when pushed to the upper limits of speed. Just the same as any larger 6.5mm chambering. Since I jam the Berger VLD into the lands, I've had to chase the lands a couple of times now from wear and the long throat gives me less room to continue seating the bullet out before the case neck does not support it properly. I have had Berger VLD's shoot very well when seated far off the lands, so I might have to try that method with my 6.5 Rem Mag soon, or get it re-chambered and reduce the barrel length to 25.5".
Here's some pics of the rifle and the accuracy I'm getting.
The rifle with a Choate tactical stock that I ended up getting rid of because it was too heavy for hunting. Looks good though.
Here's the rifle with it's "wooden hunting attire" and a couple of animals that fell victim to it.
This is my
best group at 200 yards. Load data is listed on the target
The same target showing two other 3 shot 200 yard groups tested on the same target. One is pretty bad using a Fed GM215M primer, but the other group on the bottom right is no slouch. Only difference between all 3 of the groups is the primer. Really shows how a primer change can make a HUGE difference in accuracy.
Picture of my 6.5 Rem Mag case with the 140gr Berger VLD along with a few other cartridges I have in various rifles. From left to right is;
22lr, 40 S&W, 20 VarTarg, 204 Ruger,
6.5 Rem Mag, 7mm Rem mag, and 358 Noma Mag