7-08 remington cartridge

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7mm-08 Remington


The 7mm-08 Remington is a rifle cartridge that is almost a direct copy of a wildcat cartridge developed around 1958 known as the 7mm/308. As these names would suggest, it is the .308 Winchester case necked down to accept 7 mm (.284) bullets with a small increase in case length. Of cartridges based upon the .308, it is the second most popular behind only the .243 Winchester. However, the .308 is more popular than both. In 1980, the Remington Arms company popularized the cartridge by applying its own name and offering it as a chambering for their Model 788 and Model 700 rifles.


Suggested Use


Deer
Black Bear
Sheep / Goat
Moose
Elk

Performance


With the wide range of bullet weights available, the 7mm-08 is suitable for "varminting, game-hunting, silhouette, and long-range shooting." It is also suitable for plains game." For long-range target and metallic silhouette shooting, the "plastic-tipped 162gr A-Max has proven to be very accurate with a 0.625 BC (G1). This A-Max bullet, and the 150gr Sierra Match King, are popular with silhouette shooters."


The 7mm-08 Remington works in most hunting environments, including dense forest areas and large open fields. It has a flatter trajectory than the .308 Win. and .30-06 Springfield at similar bullet weights because the slightly smaller-diameter 7mm bullet generally has a better ballistic coefficient (BC), and is thus less affected by drag and crosswind while in flight. Its trajectory is comparable to the .270 Winchester.


Its recoil is a bit more than a .243 Win. and less than most loads in a .308 Win. This mild recoil makes it suitable for youth and adults who are new shooters; however, the cartridge serves experienced shooters and hunters equally well.


Howard Brant of Shooting Industry magazine wrote: "the 7mm-08 is a real sleeper as far as the hunting field is concerned. It is a grand cartridge which packs more than sufficient wallop to efficiently down all medium-sized big-game animals found in North America and elsewhere."


Wayne van Zwoll of Petersen's Hunting magazine wrote: "Efficient case design and a bullet weight range suitable for most North American big game make the 7mm-08 a fine choice for all-around hunting. Civil in recoil, it's a perfect match for lightweight, short-action rifles. It has also courted favor on metallic silhouette ranges, where its 140-grain bullets reach 500-yard targets faster and with as much energy as 150-grain .308s." He also described it as "deadly" for elk.


David E. Petzal of Field & Stream, wrote, "The virtues of the 7mm/08 include very light recoil, not much muzzle blast, plenty of bullet weight to do the job, and gilt-edged accuracy."


The 7mm-08, with appropriate loads, meets the required standard for moose hunting in Sweden, Finland, and Norway. Such loads allow it, for that purpose, to be compared favourably with the 6.5x55mm, 7x57mm, 7x57mmR, .300 Savage, .303 British, and some .308 Winchester and .270 Winchester loads; they have killed many moose.[citation needed]


With appropriately constructed bullets, the cartridge is usable on elk, black bears and hogs.


It must be stressed, though, that the 7mm-08 Rem. is unsuitable for use on the three big bears, polar, brown, and grizzly, and on other dangerous game. In a self-defensive situation requiring stopping power on dangerous game at close range, use of a larger and heavier caliber is strongly advised. Stephen Herrero, a bear behavior expert, cites a study by the U. S. Forestry Service in Alaska that concluded the .458 Win. Mag. with a 510gr load, 375 H.&H. Mag. with a 300gr load, .338 Win Mag. with a 300gr load, and .30-06 with a 220gr load were "superior for protection against bears


OK Boys ! Opinions of the Cartridge Please ? :p RJ
 
140 gr Nosler accubond over 45.1 grains of IMR 4350 shoots three rounds touching at 100 yards when I do my part. I have only shot whitetail and mule deer with mine, but I have helped carriy two moose out of the bush that were shot with a buddies 7mm-08 I am a fan
 
It is a notoriously accurate cartridge & knew more than one guy who shot it competitively. What's not to like about it?
 
I can’t think of a more perfect short-medium range Big game caliber. I have dropped every plant eater short of Bison with my R700mtn. It’s slight reduction in recoil and no reduction in performance (slightly better than 308 in most cases) I wish my Sako Black bear was 7-08 instead of .308.

My favourite load hands down was a Barnes 145LRX over a near max Varget. Should get you around 2750-2850 with ease. Most guys can get a little better velocity if they play the powder game. I didn’t need anything else. Technically it had enough performance for me to contemplate up to 600y on large game if I couldnt close the distance for some reason. Never did shoot anything heavy over 270y though. I found this bullet didn’t break up badly and gave reasonable performance on coyote too.
 
The 7mm 08 is a great cartridge. Shoots under 1/2 inch groups.

moose taken cleanly at 328 yards... it did not take 2 steps...
Dennis-and-Moose-1.jpg


and the bullet that did it
154-Hornady.jpg


Moose-being-cut.jpg
 
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I consider the 7-08 to be a modern rendition of the 7x57 Mauser, which needs no introduction
to anyone with even limited gun smarts.
With the 7x57, I have shot most of BC's non dangerous game, plus several Black bear, one was
405 lbs, so a decent bear. Only on one moose did I take a second [unnecessary] shot.
I am absolutely certain the results would have been identical had I been packing a 7-08. Dave.
 
140 gr ballistic tip over some imr 4064. So far all I have used it for is white tail and so far no complaints with accuracy and performance. It is a nice mild recoiling round that will do it"s job.
 
Have had one for over 40 years. First one was a Rem 788 carbine that i still have. Only changes were bedding and a Canjar trigger (though I used it for 20 years with a modified factory trigger, they aren't hard to modify). Have taken everything from coyotes to moose with it. And yes, a few black bears. I have two other versions, a varmint barreled Rem 700 and a light 7mm-08 AI built on a Rem 600. It is a great all around cartridge, one of the most useful I have ever had. - dan
 
love my 7-08 target rifle. 26” barrel. 2745fps with 162 Eld and varget. it’s honestly my favourite calibre to shoot. light recoil, good barrel life, excellent ballistics. whats not to like
 
My 7mm-08 comes in Winchester Model 70 compact form. A sleeper of a rifle and a sleeper of a cartridge. I’m enjoying factory 120 grain Barnes TTSX. Accuracy and velocity good with the 20” barrel too. Carries like a 30-30. Will have this one for life!
 
My 7mm-08 comes in Winchester Model 70 compact form. A sleeper of a rifle and a sleeper of a cartridge. I’m enjoying factory 120 grain Barnes TTSX. Accuracy and velocity good with the 20” barrel too. Carries like a 30-30. Will have this one for life!

That has to be the perfect 7mm-08 for me. Any chance you want a M70 coyote in 270wsm? ��
 

These pictures might be the thing that sold me on the 7mm08... If not these specific ones from a thread like 7 years ago, then someone else's pictures just like 'em!

I didn't get a 7mm08 right then but I have one now and its a keeper for sure. Mine is a Rem 700 youth, sitting in a full size B&C stock that I got used for a good price. It came with a Kwik Klip conversion, but I replaced that with a factory hinged floorplate off the EE. Funny enough the Kwik Klip conversion actually weighs less by a few grams! But I prefer a hinged floorplate on my hunting rifle and wasn't really enamored with the capacity on the kwik klip (it technically held 4, but 4 on a closed bolt was really tight so I was using it as a 3-shot mag).
 
I have shot a few deer with various 7-08s, I usually use a 270 for deer but I love the recoil [or lack of] on the 08, if I could find a Husqvarna 1900 in 7-08 I would leave my 270 at home. We have two 7-08s in my gun cabinet, my Wife's Tikka and my Ruger compact in an MDT chassis.
 
I'd rather have a 7-08 than a 308 although the way things work out I've got 3 308's and zero 7-08's. :)

As it stands, the 6.5 Creed seems to have stolen some thunder from both of them with new rifle sales- and the .243 as well.
 
I'd rather have a 7-08 than a 308 although the way things work out I've got 3 308's and zero 7-08's. :)

As it stands, the 6.5 Creed seems to have stolen some thunder from both of them with new rifle sales- and the .243 as well.

Lol, "seems" and "some" being the key words here
 
I consider the 7-08 to be a modern rendition of the 7x57 Mauser, which needs no introduction
to anyone with even limited gun smarts.
With the 7x57, I have shot most of BC's non dangerous game, plus several Black bear, one was
405 lbs, so a decent bear. Only on one moose did I take a second [unnecessary] shot.
I am absolutely certain the results would have been identical had I been packing a 7-08. Dave.

So this. A ballistic twin, but if either has a edge it's the 7x57. One grain extra case capacity, but the mauser is loaded to satisfy lawyers since rifles for 7x57 came out in 1892. In a modern firearm it matches or exceeds the 7-08, with handloads.
 
I love this cartridge. It's great with 139gr SST and 120gr TTSX. Easy to load for. Case doesn't stretch too much compared to many. Low recoil. Kills anything that walks. What's not to like?
 
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