Don't fix what ain't broke.
I'd just keep your rifle, and buy another gun.
This. ^^
The above statements say it all. Besides, it hard to argue with the .06 track record even it' is "boring"
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Don't fix what ain't broke.
I'd just keep your rifle, and buy another gun.
This. ^^
Thanks everyone for your thoughts and ideas...giving me lots to think about. 99% chance it stays as it is, but I thought a little discussion never hurt anything
Cory
This. ^^
To me being bored with a .30/06 is being bored with rifle shooting. If you can do it with a rifle, you can do it with a .30/06. When I got interested in long range shooting, a .30/06 sporter built on a M-17 Enfield was what I used. And after some work I could count on half mile hits on 12" plates under favorable conditions. That was with a 3-9X40 hunting scope on a flat base mount so I needed an aiming target above my impact targets. With my long barrel .308 target rifle and 4-16X S&B there is little challenge in that kind of shooting, but with a hunting rifle you have to work at it a bit. Cast bullet shooting is the other end of the spectrum, where a pinch of pistol powder kicks out a lead slug at 1600-1800 fps. It takes a while to get that hang of that too. Small game, fur hunting, and plinking can be accomplished with cast bullets or with FMJ military bullets over the cast bullet load. If varminting or coyote shooting turns your crank, a light weight soft point will shoot flat and hit hard at 3500 fps. As for big game, this is where the '06 really shines, and you can't think of a big game animal that hasn't been killed by a hunter armed with a .30/06. If you can find a SAKO receiver sight, you can work at shooting with irons. When I fluke of a 5 shot 3" group at 300 yards with my old Brno, I feel pretty good, until I shoot my next group and I spoil it by being over confident and careless. That does not instill boredom. Perhaps the most challenging shooting is putting out targets at unknown distances along a trail. The object is to engage and hit each arget as you walk along the trail. You get a point for each target you hit, -2 points for each one you miss, and zero for a shot you pass up. Once you fire your first shot at a target, you're committed and must continue shooting until the target is hit. At its most challenging, the course should be arranged in such a way that prone can be seldom used, and much of it has to be shot from high positions.




























