Who is lugging around a 12lb rifle all day?
I don't like carrying around an 8lb 338 lapua all day
Long range shooting is a drive to the shooting point and shoot next to or near the truck, kind of activity.
Who is lugging around a 12lb rifle all day?
I don't like carrying around an 8lb 338 lapua all day
Long range shooting is a drive to the shooting point and shoot next to or near the truck, kind of activity.
Long range shooting is a drive to the shooting point and shoot next to or near the truck, kind of activity.
If we're going to use the baseline of impact 2000 FPS and 1,500 ft-lbs , the effective big game range would be the following.
7MM PRC (180gr) - 900m
300 PRC (225GR) - Just under 900m
300 WM (180gr) - Just under 700m
6.5 PRC (140gr) - 550M
Having said that each of these cartridges will produce either the minimum energy or velocity well beyond these distances so with modern bullet design some of these could be stretched if we're accepted 1800FPS impact velocity or slightly less than 1500 ft-lb impact energy.
I use 25s, 6.5s, 277s, 7MM, 30s and .338 for long range hunting. If I had to trim that down, the first three would be gone. I haven't seen what they are supposed do that a big 7 can't do better in the real world. A 7-300, STW or 28 Nosler set up properly is a force to be reckoned with. So what about the 30's? Well, when animals start getting much bigger than deer a big 30 just seems to hit harder. Then there's the big .338s, Lapua or Edge. There's the disadvantages of size and weight that make shots from anything other than prone problematic. Definitley not for everyone, and sure not for most situations. On the otherhand; if I had to take one long shot for everything I own, or held dear it would be with my .338 Edge. There just seem to be less "what just happened?" moments with the big .338s and those ###y 300 grain bullets. They are truly evil when they land too; in a dragging the lungs out the other side sort of way.
Dogleg,
How would you rate the .340 Weatherby (250/275 gr. bullets - no muzzle brake) vs the .338 Edge or Lapua (300 gr. bullets) ? Better for long range hunting on foot - no horse, no ATV, no stand ? Many many moons ago, I owned a .338 Winchester Magnum (800 rounds, 250/275 gr. bullets, no muzzle brake, any position, including prone with a sling) but I never had the occasion to try the .340 Weatherby.
Having now been contemplating this for a while I think I'll stick with one of the old traditional stand by's, the 7 RemMag or 300 WM.
After looking into the availability and cost of the PRC options, these 2 seem more attractive. They are far more readily instock and can be had for roughly half the price of 7 PRC/ 300 PRC.
Now I just need to narrow down my rifle options but I'm currently leaning towards Bergara.
Dogleg,
How would you rate the .340 Weatherby (250/275 gr. bullets - no muzzle brake) vs the .338 Edge or Lapua (300 gr. bullets) ? Better for long range hunting on foot - no horse, no ATV, no stand ? Many many moons ago, I owned a .338 Winchester Magnum (800 rounds, 250/275 gr. bullets, no muzzle brake, any position, including prone with a sling) but I never had the occasion to try the .340 Weatherby.
A guy sure doesn't hear anything about the Lazzeroni cartridges anymore, not like 20 yrs ago. Are they a thing of the past? A guy would think they would fit in well in this game. 30-378 Wby too.
I don't have a 340 Weatherby either; and my .338 Edge experience has been with braked 16-17 pound shoot into the next time-zone rigs. Back when I got going with them, we called them the Poorman's Lapua because RUM brass was 16 bucks a bag and a standard magnum bolt-face did the trick. Times have sure changed since then; now its the hard way. Likewise for the 338 Swamp Donkey which was a 8mm Rem necked up or 416 Rem necked down. It was practically cheaper to build and shoot one than to buy a 340 Weatherby, and got rid of the sometimes problematic free bore.
A Accumark in 340 would be interesting. I don't have one but I do have one in 270 Weatherby and it is a quite portable rig that handles like a sporter. Carried it around NZ to good effect out to 800, in some pretty steep stuff.