tylerjwitty
CGN frequent flyer
- Location
- Northern Ontario
pointless this thread has become
Wow - where do people come up with this stuff? These myths will never die - who needs facts?
Magnums, even those that are very "Overbore", do not "need" long barrels.
1. A cartridge of greater capacity, loaded with the same powder to the same pressure, will always produce a proportionally higher MV (approximately 1/4 higher than the capacity increase) than a smaller cartridge - at all barrel lengths. A short barrel does not turn a 7mm Rem Mag into a 280 Rem, then a 7mm-08 and finally a 7-30 Waters.
2. You do not "need" a long barrel to "get the most" from a Magnum cartridge - you "need" it to "get the most" from any cartridge. Velocity loss or gain is typically 20-50 fps per inch.
3. Short barrels do not "need" faster powders than long barrels - the fastest load with a long barrel will also be the fastest load in a short barrel.
As to whether or not the 7mm Rem Mag kills an animal any deader than a 280 Rem, nope, no deader either than an animal killed by a 30/30 or a 22LR. But perhaps I'm missing the "logic" at play.
good post Andy but it's no use. Chuck Hawks' website has been around just too long.
Wow - where do people come up with this stuff? These myths will never die - who needs facts?
Magnums, even those that are very "Overbore", do not "need" long barrels.
1. A cartridge of greater capacity, loaded with the same powder to the same pressure, will always produce a proportionally higher MV (approximately 1/4 higher than the capacity increase) than a smaller cartridge - at all barrel lengths. A short barrel does not turn a 7mm Rem Mag into a 280 Rem, then a 7mm-08 and finally a 7-30 Waters.
2. You do not "need" a long barrel to "get the most" from a Magnum cartridge - you "need" it to "get the most" from any cartridge. Velocity loss or gain is typically 20-50 fps per inch.
3. Short barrels do not "need" faster powders than long barrels - the fastest load with a long barrel will also be the fastest load in a short barrel.
As to whether or not the 7mm Rem Mag kills an animal any deader than a 280 Rem, nope, no deader either than an animal killed by a 30/30 or a 22LR. But perhaps I'm missing the "logic" at play.
I tried.
I just hope that my punishment for this heresy is not to be accused of having ### with Camp Cook and Gatehouse.![]()
Wow - where do people come up with this stuff? These myths will never die - who needs facts?
Magnums, even those that are very "Overbore", do not "need" long barrels.
1. A cartridge of greater capacity, loaded with the same powder to the same pressure, will always produce a proportionally higher MV (approximately 1/4 higher than the capacity increase) than a smaller cartridge - at all barrel lengths. A short barrel does not turn a 7mm Rem Mag into a 280 Rem, then a 7mm-08 and finally a 7-30 Waters.
2. You do not "need" a long barrel to "get the most" from a Magnum cartridge - you "need" it to "get the most" from any cartridge. Velocity loss or gain is typically 20-50 fps per inch.
3. Short barrels do not "need" faster powders than long barrels - the fastest load with a long barrel will also be the fastest load in a short barrel.
As to whether or not the 7mm Rem Mag kills an animal any deader than a 280 Rem, nope, no deader either than an animal killed by a 30/30 or a 22LR. But perhaps I'm missing the "logic" at play.
Wow - where do people come up with this stuff? These myths will never die - who needs facts?
Magnums, even those that are very "Overbore", do not "need" long barrels.
1. A cartridge of greater capacity, loaded with the same powder to the same pressure, will always produce a proportionally higher MV (approximately 1/4 higher than the capacity increase) than a smaller cartridge - at all barrel lengths. A short barrel does not turn a 7mm Rem Mag into a 280 Rem, then a 7mm-08 and finally a 7-30 Waters.
2. You do not "need" a long barrel to "get the most" from a Magnum cartridge - you "need" it to "get the most" from any cartridge. Velocity loss or gain is typically 20-50 fps per inch.
3. Short barrels do not "need" faster powders than long barrels - the fastest load with a long barrel will also be the fastest load in a short barrel.
As to whether or not the 7mm Rem Mag kills an animal any deader than a 280 Rem, nope, no deader either than an animal killed by a 30/30 or a 22LR. But perhaps I'm missing the "logic" at play.
you want a shorter barrel in a 7mm why not the 280?...it will lose less in a shorter barrel.
Because some people are interested in results, rather than 'efficiency' (whatever that means in regard to hunting rifles).
If you can have a shorter handier rifle that achieves ballistics that better a 24" standard caliber, isn't that a win/win?
Only if the recoil, muzzle blast, and muzzle jump aren't increased significantly.
I'm only interested in things I can measuremust be the injuneer in me
Seriously though, if I live to be a hundred years old, I will never understand the concept of "I want a carbine, and am going to sacrifice some ballistics by going with a short barrel, therefore I should go with a smaller cartridge (thereby sacrificing even more ballistics)".
I suppose if one will only hunt deer and black bear however.
...Then as an engineer you must know that certain cartridges were designed with certain bore lengths in mind for optimum performance. The 7 mm magnum lives happily at 26" and the .308 is optimized for 20-24" barrels. Getting 150 fps extra is hardly a win considering the higher level of nasty you get for very little real-world gain.
I'd go the other way and get a longer barrel for a standard cartridge. It's quieter, milder and faster.
Maybe the win is an extra 150 fps, but you contend with at least twice the muzzle blast, more recoil and little or no material gain in terms of putting food on the table.
Yep.
Then as an engineer you must know that certain cartridges were designed with certain bore lengths in mind for optimum performance. The 7 mm magnum lives happily at 26" and the .308 is optimized for 20-24" barrels. Getting 150 fps extra is hardly a win considering the higher level of nasty you get for very little real-world gain.
I'd go the other way and get a longer barrel for a standard cartridge. It's quieter, milder and faster.
Maybe the win is an extra 150 fps, but you contend with at least twice the muzzle blast, more recoil and little or no material gain in terms of putting food on the table.
Then as an engineer you must know that certain cartridges were designed with certain bore lengths in mind for optimum performance. The 7 mm magnum lives happily at 26" and the .308 is optimized for 20-24" barrels. Getting 150 fps extra is hardly a win considering the higher level of nasty you get for very little real-world gain.
I'd go the other way and get a longer barrel for a standard cartridge. It's quieter, milder and faster.




























