Your picks for favorite cartridges in 2014, by caliber

Gatehouse

CGN Ultra frequent flyer
Rating - 100%
146   0   0
Location
Pemberton BC
So hypothetically speaking....

Given what we know now about cartridges, rifles, powders, bullets and all the rest of the stuff, we could probably lose dozens of cartridges. So many have overlapping parameters (there just isn't that much difference between a .270 and a .280 or a .260 and a 6.5x55) or antiquated case designs (like the long tapered cases of the .303Brit, 375 H&H etc), the redundancy of the belt in most belted cartridges and now bullet technology has put us in a place that huge heavy bullets aren't necessarily required for hunting the larger species of North American game...

So if we were to start afresh, and only pick one Short Action and one Standard Action cartridge of each caliber, what would they be?

I'm going to mostly limit my list to bolt actions, as it is what I mostly use. I am also not going to name every single caliber out there. But feel free to add calibers and actions if that's your preference.

17- 17 WSM rimfire. I have a hard enough time picking up .22 bullets to reload, so I doubt I will ever have a 17 caliber CF. :) I don't have a 17WSM but think it's interesting. I would consider one if it came in a semi auto Tacticool rifle with a 30 round magazine though.

20- .204 Ruger Same as above ;)

22- .223 I think it's the best balanced .22 centerfire. It's accurate, fun to shot, low recoil, ammo cost peanuts to make or buy, and is capable of gophers to black bear with the right bullet and right shot. I've had 22-250 and 22-250 AI and they offer lots of velocity, but if I want more I'd probably step up in caliber. And of course we need to add the 22Lr. 22 Short etc :)

.23 - totally redundant. ;) Only slightly interesting one for me would be based on the .223 or similar case.

.24/6mm- 243 Win is the practical choice, although a friend owned a 6mm Rem and I always admired it. Although it was obvious the 243 WSSM was doomed from day 1, if we were starting fresh- like the premise of this thread is- and there were no .243 cartridges yet made, I'd pick the 243 WSSM.

.25- Always kinda liked the 25's but the 25's are somewhat in the same boat as the .23's. A bit redundant considering the 6mm's and 6.5's on either side of it. Hard to choose between the 257 Roberts, 25-06,. 257 Weatherby and the 25WSSM. I think I would actually go with a .25-308 design and the 257 WBY. Ok, 257 ROberts and 257 WBY :)

6.5- No question the .260 in a short action and the new 26 Nosler looks like the pick for a standard action.

.277- If there was ever a redundant caliber that has become so ingrained into NA hunting, this is it. Probably why there are so few .270 cartridges! I used to have a remarkable .270 Win that was stolen from me, loaded for about a dozen, but probably would never have one again. Still, the pick can only be 270WSM for SA and the .270 Win

7mm- Lots of great 7mm cartridges, but I think the 7-08 and 7mmRM can do it all, despite the redundant belt on the 7RM. A better (beltless) magnum would be a 7mm -375 Ruger, and that is pretty much true of all the magnums that currently wear redundant belts

.30- North America's most popular hunting caliber! SA is easy -.308 (Despite that I am a 300WSM fan) The list of longer and magnum .308 caliber cartridges is endless. The 300H&H is one of the coolest, but nobody would design a case like that in 2014. The 300WBY set the world ablaze....The 30-378 and 300RUM are too big and powder hungry for my taste- if I want that much powder burned I will go to a bigger caliber. SO I pick the 300WM, even if it seems that lots of douchebags use one. :)

.311-.314- As much as I love the .303 British, anything it can do,the .308 can do, with more available bullets and barrels. Here the 7.62x39 wins, mostly do to the properties of it's case, so you can easily use it for anything from subsonic loads to 30-30 level hunting loads, using a rimless case.

8mm- Very low selection, but I don't see anything wrong with any of the most popular- 8x57, 8RM and 325 WSM.

.338- In the magnums, I always thought the .338 was stuck between a good 180-200gr bullet in a .300 and any bolt action .375. I never saw my .338Wm do anything that one of my .300's couldn't do, so I don't own it anymore. So my picks for the .338 are the under-appreciated .338 Fed, which basically works like a 30-06 shooting heavy side bullets at most hunting ranges, and the 338-06 which is a nice pleasant thumper. The 338 Ruger SA may offer the best of both worlds, and is exceptional performance in a SA even though it too was pretty doomed.

.348- I know, this is mostly bolt guns...but the Mdl 71 is such a wonderful lever gun, so the .348 Win is the winner here, no surprise!

.35- I feel the same way about Most of the 35 caliber "magnum" cartridges as I do the .338 "magnum" cartridges. Why not get a .375 If you want more than a .300? Oh, you can load .357 pistol bullets for plinking? Great...You can do the same with cast bullets and Trailboss or reduced loads in any cartridge. :) In the .35's the 35 Whelen gets the nod, for the same reason the 338-06 does

9.3- Easy- 9.3x62....Although the 9.3 BS has some merit if you want a SA and a 9.3 based on a SA Ruger case would be great

.375- Obviously, the .375 Ruger is the top pick. Nobody would design a tapered case like a .375 H&H in a bolt action anymore, and the bigger 375's like the RUMs and 378 WBY include much more powder and recoil for minimal velocity gains that most hunters won't use. Although Boomers 375 RUM with 380gr bullets might be an exception. ;)

.416- Only one that make my list would be the .416 Ruger. I can appreciate the Rigby, but it's not very practical in 2014

.45- 45/70 and .458 WM, mostly for practical reasons. The Lott and WBY are awesome, though.

There are lots of bigger caliber cartridges, feel free to add on.

I picked mostly available cartridges, but I actually think that if cartridge introduction started today, we would have 4 or 5 basic cases that 90% of the cartridges were based on, and necked up or down. Life would be much simpler, but not necessarily more pleasing for the esoteric cartridge clan.

Smaller cases would be based mostly on the .223

Short actions would be either "standard" (.308) or "magnum" (WSM or RSAUM or Ruger SA)

Long action "standard" would be a form of the 30-06 or 9.3x62 case and the magnums would be on the Ruger case.

Bigger cases designed for long range shooting would be on the 338 Lapua or RUM cases

There would be a few giant "stopping" cartridges like the .500 Jeffry etc. Can't lose those ones ;)

We wouldn't see belted or rimmed cases used in bolt actions, either.

Of course, that's not how cartridge and rifle development occurred, so we have a hodge podge of old, new short/fat, long tapered etc etc cartridges which all have their merits and charm.:)

I put this all together over a few days on my Itelephone, while waiting for people. It's hunting season, so get out and hunt, but if you have some down time, tell us your pick of the cartridges, and throw in the levers and doubles and singles too! :)
 
Last edited:
Redundant or otherwise, I don't believe that a belt is as big a detriment as many decry it to be.

We are in the hunting forum, so my list is as follows:

.17 (no opinion)
.20 (no opinion)
.22LR
.223 Rem
.243 Win
.25-06
.260 Rem
.270 Win
7mm Rem Mag
30-06
7.62x39
8mm Rem Mag
338 Win Mag
35 Whelen in a dead-heat with 350 Rem Mag
9.3x62
375 Ruger
416 Rem Mag
45/70
 
Redundant or otherwise, I don't believe that a belt is as big a detriment as many decry it to be.

Absolutely. I have used many belted cartridges and they work fine. I continue to use belted cartridges, actually :) The point I am making is that in 2014, nobody would put a belt on a bolt action cartridge as it's not needed.
 
17- 17 HMR
22- in Rimfire the 22LR in centerfire the 22-250
24- 243 Win. No other choice really. 6mm Rem has held on despite almost dying in the incubator 50 years ago
25- 25-06 as its ammo is the most available and cheapest of the choices of 257 Roberts, 25-06, and 257 Wea. I would ave to agree with the OP. This chambering is stuck between some popular and well established calibers in the 24 and 6.5 bores. For some reason this bore was never a hit.
264 Personally i dont have enough experience to choose one. Unless you are a handloader or custom gun person, the 264 WM and 6.5x55 are not at all practical. Newer offerings like the 6.5 x284 and 6.5 Creedmore may build a following. If i was to purposely go out to buy one, it would be a 260 Rem. A new caliber, relatively, loaded to full power unlike the 6.5x55 and using a very popular case.
277 Can you believe that i have never owned a 270 Win. At 7 thou difference to the 7mm(scotch tape is 5thou) what is the point. The 7mm bore can load much larger projectile. Newer more powerful 270 WSM and 270 Wea will always have a cult following. The 270 WSM would make a excellent lightweight sheep platform. The 270 for me occupies a low end of the all around caliber range, for a person that can not handle recoil. 270 i suppose.
7mm For me this is the 7mm Rem mag. There are some hot rods out there that have come and gone, the 7 RM remains one of the most popular all around for so many reasons. Loading this bore much hotter with chamberings like 7 STW, 7 Wea, 7 Rum leads to minimal gains and short barrel life. The ballistic twins of 7x57 and 7-08( when loaded for modern rifles), have stolen a lot of the thunder of the 270. All one needs for most NA hunting, great deer guns.
30 There are a handful here in the most popular bore in NA that are great calibers. One could not lose with 308 Win, 30-06, 300 WM, and 300 Rum. Each holds a place in my battery, and i think i will always own at least one of each in specific use rifles. If i had to pick just one it would be the 300 Rum, loaded down to 30-06 or 300 WM level or in its full power purpose as the preeminent long range hunting round.
8mm Again i have never owned one. The 8x57 is a close cousin of the 30-06 power and performance wise if in a modern rifle and using full power loadings. Suffers from the liability issues of 100 years of military rifles of questionable strength. The WSM 8mm(?) will not last. For that entire family i see the 300 WSM as being the only survivor. the 8mm Rem mag is best known as the parent case of the 7STW. 8x57 for a irrelevant choice for 1000 Alex.
338 338 Win mag. Other of this bore, live in its shadow as custom rifles and almost cult/wildcats. The 338 Lapua is the upper end of affordable for top target rifles. Most rifles chambered for it are designed for target, my Sako 995 weighed 13 lbs, not a sheep rifle.
35 Again a bore that is almost as irrelevant as the 8mm. the 35 Whelan is the obvious choice since it is the choice for rebarreling tired 30-06 family rifles. The other 35's have no appeal for me since i dont hunt close cover such as found in the East.
375 The 375 Ruger is being pushed by that company. They have done this in the past and then left their customers wither. For me this is nothing more than a 375 H & H in a modern loading to avoid the liability of old actions in much the same way that the 7-08 replaced the 7x57. The true king of the bore is the 375 Rum. If you are coming all the way to this bore for NA, why snivel at a bit more blast and powder, if you are going to Africa the H & H still rules and will for my lifetime.
416 I have thought of the idea of rebarreling one of my 700's to 416 Rum. Since the bore is almost exclusively of African use. If i bought one it would be a Rigby or Lott. Probably second hand, go to Africa and shoot my bucket list critters and resell it upon return. Really no practical 416.
458 Either the 458 WM or a 45-70. Since i would probably use the 416 for Africa, the NA choice in this bore for me is the 45-70. Just starting to play with this.

Those are my choices of calibers for bore.
 
300 aac Blackout most fun in a small mid size case and it in a bolt action will take down a deer /less than 200 yds

most fun to a lb of powder to boot
 
.17, who needs it, sold mine

.204, nearly the same except I kept mine mostly because I like the rifle.

.223 for the black gun and gopher guys who might shoot a coyote, 22/250 for the coyote guys who might shoot a gopher.

6mms, who needs 'em? Oh sure, theres that dual purpose thing but that is better handled by the 25s anyway.

25s, .257 Weatherby. .25s are all about speed, the .257 bee is the fastest of the bunch.25-06 for that dual purpose slot that people talk about but don't do.

6.5mm, .264 Win Mag. 7 thousands of an inch fatter bullet than the 25s, but some heavier bullet choices to move up the big game ladder a bit farther. You could say that it out 25s the 25s.

.270s, Might as well keep them all, even though the Win won. They aren't going anywhere, and seem to work on medium game and the softer big-game. Just like practically everything else.

7mm. The STW, but the market decided Rem Mag a long time ago.

30s. The .308 for short actions and non bolts. the 30-06 for a standard cartridge for everyone else. In the mags, the .300 Win. Again, there was a contest and it won a long time ago. No use fighting it.

8mm? Who needs em? If you do, then the Rem Mag.

.338. The Win Mag is a fat .300 for people who are scared of bears. The RUM, Edge and Lapua for looong range.

.35s. Not a lot of interest there as witnessed by the market failure of rifles so chambered. The .358 for the odd lever guy, and the Whelen for those that haven't figured out that the "poorman's H&H" is easily beat by the real one.

.375, H&H of course but the .375 'Bee will chamber the H&H as well and should have satisfied those who don't like the carrot shaped case.

.416, the Rigby.

.45s, the Lott. The Win would satisfy most, but since the Lott will chamber both why not go that way.
 
Can't find a use for anything bigger than a .22 LR and smaller than a 25.06 Rem. So there's my first two. The 25.06 is, IMHO, the best all around deer caliber to be had.
.270 Win. and .270 WSM are excellent deer/elk calibers.
30.06 is a gimme for elk and moose, but a .300 WM and WSM are just a tad all around better.
And I don't want to hunt anything that takes more than a .300 Win Mag.

An aside: One to watch for that might catch on is the .26 Nosler.

FWIW
 
17 - 17HMR
22 - 22LR rimfire, 222 Remington Centerfire, with the Swift added for long range effectiveness.
24 - I have always preferred the 6mm Remington, so it stays
25 - The Roberts has always had a corner of my heart in this diameter. Bee if you want a zinger.
264 - The 6.5x55 for 99% of all use, the 264 Win Mag for the rest. [New 26 Nosler intrigues me though]
27 - 270 Winchester, hands down
7mm - 7x57 is my all time favorite, but I do like the 7mm STW as well.
30 - 30-06 wins here, with the 308 Norma Mag as my favorite Magnum [no surprise, right?] [I like 30's, and have choices: 30-30, 300 Savage, 300WSM, 300 Win Mag, etc]
303 - the British gets my vote here, particularly in a Ross or P14.
8mm - 8x57, with the 8mm Rem Mag the runner up.
338 - 338 Winchester is the only choice for me.
34 - 348 Winchester, because of the awesome lever M71.
35 - 358 Norma Magnum....if you are slinging big bullets, may as well chase them along a bit.
366 - 9.3x62 gets my vote.
375 - No matter how they try, no real improvement ever made on the 375 H&H. But for a levergun, the 38-55 is my choice.
416 - I like the 416 Rem Mag the best....Rigby would be second.
458 - The Lott is best, IMHO.....45-70 is fun.

Dave.
 
17 mach 2. Squirrels and crows
22 Lr and short. Rabbit. Grouse. Squirrels. Plinking
204 ruger. Speed junkie varmint getter
25/20. Perfect fox caliber. I need one
25/06. Ground hog. Coyote. Pronghorn. Deer. Caribou. Black Bear. I do dual purpose!
264 wm. Don't have one. Yet! Longer range mid size game getter
30/06. Most versatile 30 cal. 110/240 gr bullets. Will take any north American game
338 wm. Not as long as my buddies 300wm but hits harder. I just may get one lol
35 Whelen. Love the 06 case. A close to mid range large game for north America. I'm currently thinking about getting one soon
375 hh. I don't have one but it's on the list.
450/400. Love doubles and this caliber will take any animal that walks. With the exception of my brothers wife!
45/70. How can you not love the 45/70. Mice to moose. Bad breath range to 1000 yards. It's not flashy but it works
458 wm. My new joy that I hope to take to Africa for buffalo. Hope to drop a bear with it in the next couple weeks
50 Cal. Southern Ontario whitetail black powder only seasons. However I'd like a rolling block in 50/90 someday

As you can see I'm a hunter who likes to plink
I know I left some gaps but for hunting purposes I believe I'm covered when I finish my need list. I have a long wish list however

My 2x favs are 257 and 458. I like hunting in thick cover close to the game
 
.22 LR (or Magnum - the magnum is a "little" more effective and a "little" louder and a "little" less accurate)
.270W (100-160 grns; accurate and effectively covers ALL calibres from .22/250,.243 to 30/06 and good for S. Ontario); if it cant be killed with a 160gr 270W you need the next calibre,
.375 H&H (accurate and effectively covers the rest of the world)
 
I'm just going to put down what I have in my collection as I don't buy rifles chambered for rounds I don't like/use.

.22 - .223. Cheap to shoot, low noise, adequate for everything up to and including coyotes at reasonable ranges
.24 - .243-06 AI. Not a factory round, I know, but it's my favorite for the caliber.
.25 - .257 Roberts. Nice low recoil round.
.26 - 6.5x55. Great low recoil round for deer, elk, moose with lots of bullet selection.
.27 - .270 Win. Classic round. I load mine with 130 Accubonds.
.28 - 7x64 Brenneke and 7x57. I love both even though they are pretty similar. Have several 7x57's.
.30 - .308 Win in the short actions and .30-06 in the long. No magnum .30's for me as these two get the job done.
.323 - 8x57 or 8x64 Brenneke. Another tie.
.338 - .338 Federal
.358 - Don't have one yet but I'm working on a 9x57 build using a .358 barrel.
.366 - No brainer here. 9.3x62 or .366 Wagner if you prefer.
.375 - .375 H&H. Still the best.
.416 - .416 Ruger.
.458 - .45-70 in a Siamese Mauser. Loaded to the hottest loads it packs a good punch.
 
I'll list some of my own, what I use and don't use. .17- what's the point when you can have a .22lr, .24 and .25 don't care to much about them for some reason, .26 - 6.5x55 was one of my favorites but no longer have one, .27 no use for them as it sits between two better calibers, .28 don't own any now , but I did like the 7x57 mauser, and was considering the 7x64, .30 - don't like them to much-perhaps overrated and to common, but given that i would still use a .308 or 30-06 if I had nothing else , .32 - all time favorite 8x57 mauser , also like the 325 wsm , .33- don't need them but the .338 win mag and 338-06 are pretty cool, .35-boring for me, .366 -9.3x62 one of the most useful all around cartridges invented , my second favorite, was also considering to build a 9.3x64 brenneke , .375- I respect the 375h&h but if I want big I go for better and more power for my needs, I chose the 375 ruger- one of the only improved inventions for modern cartridges....but it's not THE KING! As theres bigger and stronger or more praise worthy and efficient.
 
Last edited:
So if we were to start afresh, and only pick one Short Action and one Standard Action cartridge of each caliber, what would they be?
I'd go for a 223 and a 7x57 or 270Win or 280 or 30/06.

.277- If there was ever a redundant caliber that has become so ingrained into NA hunting, this is it. Probably why there are so few .270 cartridges! I used to have a remarkable .270 Win that was stolen from me, loaded for about a dozen, but probably would never have one again. Still, the pick can only be 270WSM for SA and the .270 Win
I don't understand the big hate for the 270Win. It was far ahead of all other chamberings at the time that it's been near impossible to improve on it, esp now with the better bullets available. This would explain the lack of other .277" cartridges.
 
.223 ( cheap accurate fun)
.270 win ( my old go to cartridge ,shot most of my critters with one with cup and core bullets)
30-06 (kills way better than the press would have you believe and new bullets have made it even better)
8x57 ( magic with a 200gr bullet @ 2650)
9.3x62 ( my personal fun to shoot / recoil threshold and more than enough for anything I want to hunt with a 286 partition @ 2500)
all of the above are efficient and proven, require no more than 22 inches of barrel,a 7 1/2 pound rifle, expensive or controversial projectiles or hard to find powders to make them shine.
 
I don't understand the big hate for the 270Win. It was far ahead of all other chamberings at the time that it's been near impossible to improve on it, esp now with the better bullets available. This would explain the lack of other .277" cartridges.

It's not hate, the premise for the thread is that if we were developing cartridges from scratch today, there probably wouldn't be quite a few cartridges, and the .270 is one of them.
 
Back
Top Bottom