I'd be willing to bet a shiny nickle that people are alot more sensitive to recoil than want to admit it.
I'd be willing to bet a shiny Twonie that more people are not as sensitive to recoil as they think they are... that is the way fear works...
I'd be willing to bet a shiny nickle that people are alot more sensitive to recoil than want to admit it.
I'd be willing to bet a shiny Twonie that more people are not as sensitive to recoil as they think they are... that is the way fear works...
I remember shooting my lightweight hunting rifle. Didn’t kick a ton to me. I saw somebody else shoot it and could hardy believe how much their shoulder recoiled backwards lol. We can handle a lot more if we get passed that fear
I've got 4 Kimbers in Magnum chamberings from 270 WSM to .338 Win Mag. Recoil is like a major league pitcher wound up and threw a potato chip at you. Much ado about nothing.
Hows this for efficency? Take a cartridge that kicks about like a .270 so kids can shoot it. Sighted for 3” high at 100 it’ll zero at 325; allow a center chest hold out to 400, and enable still holding on hair til 475 so basically out to 500 screw drop charts, subtention reticles or turrets. At 500 it still delivers 3/4 ton of energy, and its wind drift with hunting bullets is right in there with the good ones. It burns a bit of powder, but you can make it back on the bullets. 24 or 26” barrel doesnt seem to make much difference in the field. Yeah, someone should invent the .257 Weatherby.
In what world does a 270 kick like a 257 Roy? I’ve owned both a 25-06 (closest to a 270 I’ve owned) and 257 WBY, noticeable difference in recoil. A 243 is a more appropriate cartridge for introducing a young kid to big game calibres, unless you’re wanting them to not enjoy shooting for some strange reason.
Rifle weight Recoil Energy (ft/lbs) Recoil Velocity (fps)
.25-06 Rem. (100 at 3230) 8.0 11.0 9.4
.25-06 Rem. (120 at 3000) 8.0 12.5 10.0
.270 Win. (120 at 2675) 8.0 10.0 9.0
.270 Win. (130 at 3140) 8.0 16.5 n/a
.270 Win. (140 at 3000) 8.0 17.1 11.7
.270 Win. (150 at 2900) 8.0 17.0 11.7
.257 Wby. (100 at 3602) 9.25 15.8 10.5
.257 Wby. (115 at 3433) 9.25 17.7 11.1
.257 Wby. (120 at 3300) 9.25 15.1 10.3
In what world does a 270 kick like a 257 Roy? I’ve owned both a 25-06 (closest to a 270 I’ve owned) and 257 WBY, noticeable difference in recoil. A 243 is a more appropriate cartridge for introducing a young kid to big game calibres, unless you’re wanting them to not enjoy shooting for some strange reason.
In what world does a 270 kick like a 257 Roy? I’ve owned both a 25-06 (closest to a 270 I’ve owned) and 257 WBY, noticeable difference in recoil. A 243 is a more appropriate cartridge for introducing a young kid to big game calibres, unless you’re wanting them to not enjoy shooting for some strange reason.
In the real world. Weatherbys arent exactly famous for being light, and a .257 is a cream-puff to shoot. If I havent owned a dozen .270s Wins I havent had one, and currently have 5 in all 3 flavors. I’ve only got 2 257s left, had 3 for awhile.
My boy started with a 2 pound .22 just before he was 4, .223 and 44/40 shortly after, went though the .243 like blur and was on the 257 by age 10 and was comfortable taking a few shots from a .300 and .338 now and again. Comfortable enough that he suspected I was trying to pass off a baby’s gun off on him when he could finaly get a big game licence at 12. I actually had to get another one to use when we bunted together to convince him that it was a real rifle. He got some cred back by useing a muzzleloader with 3 pyrodex pellets though. Those were in the CWD days of shooting truck loads of deer. I did relent and let him use a 300 Weatherby Ultra Lightweight for bis first moose at 13. Things kind of snowballed from there and he was over 125 big game animals by age 17. Many of those were in Australia with a tupperware 30-06. I gothim his own 300 about then and hes switched back and forth since then. My daughter got a later start, and shot her first deer with a .243 at 12. By the next year she was useing a 7/08, mostly to get the weight down and has sort of stuck there for big game. She also started muzzleloading that year and got her moose with smokeless loads in a savage that year.
I’m a terrible parent.![]()
The .257 Wby in the chart is 1.25 lbs heavier, but it's certainly in the same ball park.
In the real world. Weatherbys arent exactly famous for being light, and a .257 is a cream-puff to shoot. If I havent owned a dozen .270s Wins I havent had one, and currently have 5 in all 3 flavors. I’ve only got 2 257s left, had 3 for awhile.
My boy started with a 2 pound .22 just before he was 4, .223 and 44/40 shortly after, went though the .243 like blur and was on the 257 by age 10 and was comfortable taking a few shots from a .300 and .338 now and again. Comfortable enough that he suspected I was trying to pass off a baby’s gun off on him when he could finaly get a big game licence at 12. I actually had to get another one to use when we bunted together to convince him that it was a real rifle. He got some cred back by useing a muzzleloader with 3 pyrodex pellets though. Those were in the CWD days of shooting truck loads of deer. I did relent and let him use a 300 Weatherby Ultra Lightweight for bis first moose at 13. Things kind of snowballed from there and he was over 125 big game animals by age 17. Many of those were in Australia with a tupperware 30-06. I gothim his own 300 about then and hes switched back and forth since then. My daughter got a later start, and shot her first deer with a .243 at 12. By the next year she was useing a 7/08, mostly to get the weight down and has sort of stuck there for big game. She also started muzzleloading that year and got her moose with smokeless loads in a savage that year.
I’m a terrible parent.![]()
On two separate occasions, I took two different 16 or 17 year old boys to the range with me. Neither had ever fired a CF rifle of any sort. With a bit of coaching for proper technique, I started them with a 22-250 and then some middle of the road caliber and by the end of it on the same day had them both shooting a 375H&H with no troubles at all. You should have seen the grins.
can be worst if they ever had the buffaloes fever ...
Soooo terrible! How dare you let your kids grow to love shooting and hunting!
I guess I misunderstood what you were saying, I was thinking you meant starting them off the bat with the likes of a 257 WBY, not that they can handle it when taught how to shoot and eased into it a little.
The OP’s numbers are very different from the ones you just listed, and I remember putting my 25-06 into a recoil calculator and it came in around 20 lbs not 10-12 pounds.
What we usually do with magnum cartridges is set up with 5 or 6 rifles apiece and shoot them in rotation so they don't heat up too much. After a couple hours of that someone usually fires up the barbeque while the others keep shooting, then have lunch. Depending on the mood we might break a couple cases of clays with trap loads, then go back to the rifles and shoot til dark. That can easily run into a couple or three hundred rifle rounds. Then we drive home #####ing about the price of barrels, and debate stopping for ice cream. Recoil doesn't even get mentioned. It might be important to some, but not ice cream important.