YIKES ! 13.5 lbs
RJ
Long action magnum Tikkas make great donors for short mag, long, high BC bullets. Wsm or saum cartridges generally work good in shorter barrels as I’m sure you’ve read. You could always pick up a 7mm rem mag tikka and shoot it for a while and practice longer range. There’s a few newer choices that come with brakes. Later do a shortmag prefit with a fast twist to shoot heavy for caliber bullets. I would also start buying reloading gear, for what you want to do it will be a necessity.
YIKES ! 13.5 lbsRJ
Sounds like the brake is a good idea if I am going lightweight. was the brake custom?
I have an 8 pound 460 weatherby, it thumps good but not ideal for long range.
This sounds like my thinking on this project possibly put it in the chassis I want to use and practice on the 7mm until I am ready to rebarrel. As for the long actions with short magnum if wanting to use the long high bc bullets is there anything to consider when chambering? If wanting to utilize all the case capacity?I am on the road to reloading and have access to friends shop in the meantime to help work up loads. Thanks for the insite
Finally the most important thing is practice/training. Shooting long range in field conditions is no joke, especially in the mountains of BC. Shooting a "thumper" of a caliber definitely increases your wind error budget but you still need the skills and experience to read the terrain and understand how it will effect bullet flight/wind drift. If you're serious about shooting long range, I'd definitely suggest getting a different rifle in a short action caliber that is more wallet friendly to shoot both in terms of ammo cost and barrel life. Use that to both work on improving your skills and almost more importantly, learning what your limitations are.
Phil & Caylen from Modern Day Sniper have commented that many hunters that use magnums cannot adequately shoot them. And they know this because they train a bunch of them. Magnums are punishing if your fundamentals are even slightly off, and the concussion and recoil of magnums develops really bad habits in shooters.
They recommend non-magnums for the majority of hunters, and I still stand by this suggestion to the OP. I think the OP would be much better off with something like a 6.5x55, or maybe even a 6.5 PRC, then the heavier cartridges. Newer shooters always seem to have some fascination for big magnums, but it just does them a disservice in the long run.
Yeah, I don't disagree. Ultralight magnums are just unpleasant to shoot and honestly totally unnecessary for the ranges most guys who have them will shoot at (because they don't practice much cause their rifles are just unpleasant to shoot). I remember shooting some guy's 7lbs .300 RUM at the range cause he was doing load dev and getting terrible accuracy and wanted to know if it was him or the rifle (it was him) and after 3rds I was more than done with that gun, haha.
6.5 PRC is actually a really good call, plenty of energy to 700yds, mild recoil and good factory ammo available. In my mind, it's really a balancing act between recoil and weight (to mitigate said recoil). A guy could get away with a lighter weight 6.5 PRC than .300PRC and still have a very "shootable" rifle, probably the better call for the OP's application.
Hi all this is my first post and I am a pretty new shooter.
I am looking for help deciding on a build I am doing for a longish range hunting rifle based off a tikka action.
Here are my perameters:
1.I am looking for something to take the biggest of game in bc ( elk, moose, caribou, bear, sheep, goat)
2. Want it to be capable of 700 yards in the field. At 500 a hammer
3. Would like to reach out further for practice (1000)
4. Want a shorter barrel 20-22 inch plus possibly a brake depending on caliber.
5. Lightweight is a factor will primarily used in mountain hunting situations and fly in hunting.
From my own research I have come down to 3 choices of caliber. In order of my current preference
1. 300wsm 2. 6.8 western *not tikka action? 3. 7rsaum
300wsm:
PROS
-Ability to run factory ammo. I currently do not reload but would like to in the near future.
-tikka action could allow higher bc bullets with long action?
-Factory ammo availability
-bullet weight
-good in grizzly country
CONS
-barrel length? 24?
-recoil in lightweight gun
-needs brake + hearing protection?
6.8 western
PROS
- lighter recoil
-short action?
-shorter barrel
- .277 I already own 270 win could be good for future reloading both rifles
- ammo availability?
CONS
-bullet selection?
-new caliber
-
7 Saum
PROS
-shorter barrel
-recoil
-bullet selection
CONS
-factory ammo
-needs hand loads
So I'm looking for any suggestions here these are my options built as follows:
Tikka magnum
Mdt hnt26
22inch carbon prefit tikka barrel ( bull or sendero)? 1-9 twist (1-10?)
Reaming options for long action? Will this work with factory ammo? I don't fully understand this
Muzzle brake suggestions?
Just buy a New 6.8 rifle?
Or tikka mag
20 inch barrel custom 6.8 1-7.5 twist
No brake
Mdt hnt 26
7saum tikka mag
22 inch prefit carbon sendero 1-8.5
No brake
Mdt Hnt 26
Scope swarovski z5 3.5-18x44mm
Thanks for any input
I have even witnessed at 200 yards, a mule deer doe take two 7mm Rem Mag rounds (160's) and still not instant kill, it did not go far but sometimes things just happen. My 270 Win with 130's, at 75 yards on a mule buck, it did not instant die but made it 15 yards. With my 6.5 CM, one mule at 150, was down right away, the other at 200 was not instant killed but very close to it, walked about 2 steps. The 30's may have the larger surface area to deliver the energy into the animal better than a 6 or 6.5mm, but the 6mm has speed, and the 6.5 can have speed ( PRC ) but I feel they penetrate good, and dead is dead. I doubt I will use my 270 for deer again, eventually set it up with Barnes bullets and larger game. I would like to have a 6.8 Western, if it becomes mainstream.
One question does the 6.5prc have the same bolt face as the other magnums? Could just use a 6.5 tikka for the same build if I decided I'm assuming just changing bolt stop if so?