.270 WSM seems a logical step.
Rob
A .270 WSM or .270 Weatherby would be a perfect step up. Of course an easier step would be to start shooting premium bullets out of the OP's .270 Winchester and just keep shooting everything with that rifle.
.270 WSM seems a logical step.
Rob
All the hunting I do locally is in grizzly country and I personally would feel under gunned for any of these wanderings.
This is interesting. C-FBMI, is there game you'd hunt with a .300 magnum that you wouldn't hunt with a .270? The game I wouldn't hunt with a .270 I wouldn't hunt with a .30 caliber rifle either. The difference in the diameter of the expanded bullet between a .277 and a .308 is minimal, velocity is similar, and bullet weights are comparable. Its not until you get to the mediums that the larger expanded frontal area combined with and the penetration enabling mass becomes proportionately larger to the extent that there is a clear advantage in wound volume on heavy/dangerous game.
To my way of thinking, the most dangerous thing about owning a .375 big game rifle, is justifying the ownership or use of anything else.
The DNR guys here dumped their wonderful M-70 .338 in favor of a 7 mag Browning for bear work, and I'm willing to bet a bullet from 150-180 grs put into the pointy end of an oncoming polar bear, at bad breath range, won't do it much good.
I had a full sized .270 and a lightweight .308 at one point. The .270 was more accurate and more pleasant to shoot by a fair stretch. I regret selling it. I wanted a .270 back for years after that and now I finally have one again, along with a .30/06. These days everyone says there isn't much difference between a .270 and a .30-06. Lots of people seem to do well as an all-rounder with the 150 grain Nosler partition bullet in the .270. I'm still torn between the .270 and the .30/06 and would probably have one of each just to fiddle around between 130 and 200 grains with good ballistics - leave the .270 at 130 and the '06 at 180 or 200 grains. I like them both too much to only have one or the other, but if forced to choose and I could still have the .375, I'd pick the .270.
I still think maybe the .270 is the ideal combination of recoil, bullet SD/BC, velocity, ballistics, and hard hits. OTOH, there may be something to the idea that velocity becomes jarring after 2700 fps or so. I don't find 180 grain .30-06's unpleasant at all. I don't find 130 grain .270s hard to shoot either, though recoil seems a touch sharper - ? I need to shoot both more side by side to really figure this out.
But when I got the .375 H&H, it was instant love. I don't know why. Perhaps it was because I expected hell on walnut, but found the cartridge fairly pleasant, even fun! I can group with it offhand, scopes shouldn't be a bother if they have enough eye relief, and it doesn't cost what .458 Win Mag costs. The .458 Lott/Win Mag might be over my upper limit as I find it unpleasant and punishing (time will tell). Not so with the .375. I just don't see a need to play with .338s or other medium bores since I like this one so much.
I'm a very inexperienced hunter, but have a little experience as a shooter. From reading, I think an ideal brace of rifles might be:
1. a .270 with 130 grain Nosler Partitions or Barnes TSX to snipe any big game animal with plenty of range, punch, and less recoil. 150 or 160 grain bullets if you think a grizz might eat you.
2. a .375 H&H magnum for everything huge or nasty that one doesn't have complete confidence in the .270 for, whether the lack of confidence is justifiable or not.
No point in buying a camera with 85 and 100mm lenses. Get a 50 mm and 100 mm and make the choice clear. A 30/06 would probably work as well as a .270, but either way the .375 doesn't change, and when you would load the '06 with 220 grain solids, why not just put 300 grain solids in the H&H and settle the matter? It seems to crowd the heavy end, leaving a gap for 110-130 grain bullets.
For me,
One gun: .30-06 or .375 H&H
Two: .270 (or 30/06!) and .375 H&H
There you have it. Lots of blathering from me.
Did they give a reason why they went smaller? Obviously felt that the 7 mag was adequate, but why dump the .338?
Can someone explain to me how and why the 270 is a better choice than a 308 or 06.
Thx.
Can someone explain to me how and why the 270 is a better choice than a 308 or 06.
Thx.
"THE .375 H&H MAGNUM
But the queen of the medium bores is the .375 H&H Magnum, one of the world's most useful and widely distributed cartridges, and probably the best all-around cartridge ever devised." -- Jack O'Connor, The Complete Book of Rifles and Shotguns, Outdoor Life (1961).
Can someone explain to me how and why the 270 is a better choice than a 308 or 06.
Thx.
I have a related issue. I know that my next big rifle purchase will be a model 70. What i don't know is whether i want a model 70 safari in .375 or whether i want a featherweight in 30-06. Functionally i will only ever need a 30-06 , but considering i already have a remington 7600 in 270. That being said i love the feel of the model 70 so it would make sense to use for hunting around here.
Any suggestions from the always wise gun nuts. Also sorry if this is considered a hi-jack im posting it becasue i think it doesn't deserve its own topic but it goes along with this one
Can someone explain to me how and why the 270 is a better choice than a 308 or 06.
Thx.
Can someone explain to me how and why the 270 is a better choice than a 308 or 06.
Thx.



























