For 300 yard deer hunting either Savages do what they were designed for.Dead is dead in the right hands...............Harold.............I'm sure the old timers with the 44-40's thought the same about the velocity wingnuts with the new fangled 30-30
I'm not sayin' that it's better than the 243, but there are several 250Savage loads out there that give 3000fps with 100gr bullets. This puts it clearly in the very same league as the 243.That is not my thinking.
The 250 Savage was dubbed the 250-3000, because of its velocity. However, that 3,000 fps, is only with 87 grain bullets. The other common weight of bullet for it, the 100 grain, is only in the 2850 fps range.
The 243 has a great variety of bullet weights, from 55 to about 107 grains.
The 100 grain 243 bullet, with a better BC than the 250 Savage, leaves the muzzle about 250 fps faster than the 100 grain 250 Savage, in the 3100 fps range.
....The 300sav has about 15% less recoil and that is quite noticeable for most shooters.....
How did you come up with that? At equal pressures, the two cartridges are separated by less than a 2% MV difference (at most 50 fps), and that does not translate into a 15% difference in recoil - more like 6-8%.
I was referring to factory ammo - which is about 7% difference in MV which translates to about 15% difference in recoil.
Two more things about recoil:
- no-one can distinguish a difference of 8% recoil, especially at the light 308 recoil levels (i.e. 15-18 ft/lbs); and
- if it's too much recoil for you, there are many cures, such as reducing the MV of your loads, and using lighter bullets.
Handload? - load the 308 down a smidge.
Down to 300sav MV???
The 300sav, 35rem & 7mm-08rem all come in around the same recoil and I find I can shoot them all day at the bench but not so with the 308win. After about 30rounds with the 308win the pleasure in gone for me.
Don't handload? you're in trouble with choice for the 300 Savage, and for the 308, you can choose from an enormous variety of bullet weights and velocities. There is even "low recoil" ammo available.
"...Is it that dead?..." More like on the verge of obsolescence. Mind you, the gun rag writers said that about the .45-70 for eons. No new firearms are chambered in it.
Check the Savage catalogue. Walnut or stainless?
Sadly it was dropped from production this year.
via the custom you can still get it ...
The 300 Savage is simply an inferior 308 Winchester, and it doesn't matter that it came first.
At equal pressures, the two cartridges are separated by less than a 2% MV difference (at most 50 fps),......
So which is it? Inferior or similar?
I have stated facts and been met by emotion - aside from mentionning the very short for caliber neck on the 300 Savage, which is not conducive to optimum accuracy, there's nothing else to say.
See my previous post - unless you are talking about factory ammo, in which case you are right. The .250 Savage will exceed 3000 fps with 100gr bullets, so it really gives up nothing in practical terms to the .243 Win - in fact the .243 requires about 15-20% more powder to reach the same velocity (3000fps).
And, as I mentioned earlier, for heavier game it does quite well with 115gr and 120gr bullets at 2700-2800fps; those heavier bullets are not an option with the .243 Win.
I have no problem with someone who likes the .250 Savage. I don't have one but I do have a .257 Roberts, which I also like very much. I do have some problems with some velocity claims.
Looking at reloading data, the max shown on the Hogdon site is 2936 with a 100 grain bullet, the rest are in the 2800 fps range. 117 and 120 are well down into the 2500-2600 fps range. All of this provides for light recoil and 'efficiency', but not super high velocity. This doesn't mean the cartridge (and rifle, and shooter) cannot use it effectively, but it is not a super cartridge.
As for the Barnes site, it shows a maximum velocity for 100 grain bullets of 2832 fps with 100 grain bullets, not 3000.
Any cartridge can be loaded to higher than factory or reloading data specifications, but that doesn't mean it should be.
I don't dispute its light recoil, nor effectiveness as proven to some.




























