25-06 suggestions

Want to pick up a 25-06 you guys have a favourite brand for this caliber or any tips on buying one?

Bolt Action
Budget: $1000
Use: deer, pronghorn, coyotes

Your choice of cartridge is most sound! One member mentioned that he has a Sako AV in this cartridge.......buy one of these! IMO, the older/used Sako's are really under priced, you get a lot of gun for what you pay for. Of course make sure that it is in great shape.
 
What do you guys think spend the high side of my limit on a wetherby vanguard 25-06 or pick up a savage axiss 2 and spend more money on a scope? I have a scope I can put on the weatherby but it's old and kinda ####ty.

Pardon my ignorance but what is EE?

Oh to be so young and naïve!

Here is my advice. I would shop the Equipment Exchange forums hard and look for a used Weatherby or Browning A-Bolt/A-Bolt II and also shop around for a good used scope (another EE forum...this will be your happy place once you apply for access). You're looking for a gently used Leupold VX2 3-9x or Burris Fullfield. I guess you could also look for a Bushnell Elite 4200 but I tend to stick with Leupold and Burris.

My 25-06 is a custom A-Bolt with a Gaillard barrel and a Burris Fullfield 3-9x. It's a dandy combination though if I lived out in open country I would probably upgrade to a 3.5-10x Leupold.
 
Nothing wrong with a 2506 I have two one is a custom Rem 700 with a Benchmark 5 r Barrel shoots good not great other is a Tika now that shoots Great ! Find a good used Rifle on the EE pay less and get more rifle
 
My first 25-06 was a Remington 700 Varmint. Sold it to buy a Remington 700 SPS Stainless.
The Hornady 120 grain HP went clean through a black bear. My friend says the Nosler 120 grain Partition will go clean through a moose.
Rifle cost equal to the cost of scope/rings/bases is about right.
Mine is my backup for mule deer and black bear after the 280 Remington in a 700 BDL SS
While the Nosler and Hornady 120's are great I switched to Barnes 100 grain at around 3400 fps but to date it was only tested on a crow . . . wasted might be a better word!
 
I would probably not get a Howa in 25 06 because of the 22" barrel, I think a 24" barrel. Would be a minimum in 25 06 and 26" would be preferred. I would definitely look at a Howa in another calibre or a 25 06 in another brand.
 
22" is plenty. BUT getting the same gun in a Vanguard version solves the problem anyways with the standard 24" barrels they come with. SOOOOOOOO........GRIZZ , have you narrowed it down yet?
 
My belief is that the .270 retains energy a bit better with some heavier rounds and doesn't drop as quickly after 5 or 600 yards.

But regarding 25-06's my neighbor had a T3 lite in that caliber, he sold it cause it only shot 2 rounds tightly and then wandered at the third and got worse, I believe it was heat and the pencil barrel, so I would suggest avoiding the Tikka T3 lite in this particular caliber

I would go with a howa, they show them available as barrelled actions on the website so you may be able to order one through prophet river or irunguns for less, and put a Boyd's or GRS or McMillan or whatever on it
 
25-06, is a very good open country deer caliber. For me that is its strength, along with being one of the recommended calibers for small/young/recoil shy people.

At close range, with premium projectile it will easily handle a Elk or Moose, if you do your part.

For me it's weaknesses are maximum 120gr projectiles, and relatively hard to find ammo. The .257 bore seems somewhat a redheaded stepchild, caught between 6mm, and 6.5mm. Target shooters pick those bores, thus projectile development and availability.are poor for .257.
 
One of the shooting magazines did a write up comparing the 6.5 Creed to the 25/06. Interestingly the 25/06 won

On what basis? With what round? If you put a target round up next to a partition, the target round will win in a lot of ways, just curious if it was an "apples to apples" comparison with the best BC projectile available for both?
 
22" is plenty. BUT getting the same gun in a Vanguard version solves the problem anyways with the standard 24" barrels they come with. SOOOOOOOO........GRIZZ , have you narrowed it down yet?

Trying to narrow it down. What's the biggest positive/negative between a 22" barrel and a 26" barrel in a 25-06. I am not a long shooter most of my shots are within 200yards.

I appreciate all the responses and suggestions you guys are awesome!!

I did find a Westherby Vanguard Fleur De Lis which seems like a nice rifle but it's definitely at the top of my spending limit.

That Howa somebody posted up top looks like a great gun also.

I applied for the EE forums also.
 
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Trying to narrow it down. What's the biggest positive/negative between a 22" barrel and a 26" barrel in a 25-06.

Velocity. The 22" barrel will lose around 100 fps, or slightly more compared to a 26" barrel. With the higher velocities of the 25-06 the slight loss is not noticeable in real world hunting situations. At really long ranges you may see a slight difference but most people will never push the limits of their gun far enough to ever notice. My Savage Weather Warrior has a 22" barrel and I prefer the shorter barrel. Handles nicer than an unnecessarily longer barrel. Plus in a smaller contoured hunting rifle barrel, theoretically, the shorter barrel will be more accurate due to less "barrel whip". Only way I would go with a 26" barreled gun would be in something like a Remington 700 Sendero with the heavy barrel, but then again I wouldn't be toting something that heavy around for what I do.
 
25-06, is a very good open country deer caliber. For me that is its strength, along with being one of the recommended calibers for small/young/recoil shy people.

At close range, with premium projectile it will easily handle a Elk or Moose, if you do your part.

For me it's weaknesses are maximum 120gr projectiles, and relatively hard to find ammo. The .257 bore seems somewhat a redheaded stepchild, caught between 6mm, and 6.5mm. Target shooters pick those bores, thus projectile development and availability.are poor for .257.

How many different bullets does a person need? You can get either the 100gr Scirocco or the 110 Accubond, two A-Frames and three choices of Partition from 100-120gr. All before you get to the bonded bullets with a half-dozen offerings from Hornady, Nosler and Barnes. Then you get into the wide world of cup-and-core bullets which are legion.

So, while it's no 30 caliber of 7mm, it's not like trying to find bullets for a 348 Winchester.
 
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