Hey TreX! TT here

. Thought about the Swift?
That flat country your in will have some serious wind too won't it. I know you reload so why don't you try a custom chamber of some type. Anybody that shoots a .219 Zipper shouldn't be shy of a wildcat of some type. I built a .22/284 but wouldn't advise that unless you want the weight of a barrel that can make use of it. There's the Middlestead which is a .243 necked down to .224 and is one baddass chamber. Wish I had built one so likely will some day

.
However your set on 6mm and for good reason with the wind. Here goes the pitch for the Savage

. Barrel comes off and can be rechambered easily. How about the left hand long action with the longest barrel in .243 and having it reamed out to something along the lines of the 6/06. There are several chambers available. Do a google on 6mm Gibbs or 6mm Catbird

. Clymer rents reamers if a local smith doesn't have one.
.204 seems to be a flat shooter but long range coyotes with the light bullet has my concern. Hawgs PD's and gopher sure but coyotes are purty tuff 400 or more yards away/tt
From Jarret's site!
243 Catbird
68-70 gr. Bullet.................4100fps
85 gr. Bullet......................3800 fps
95 gr. Nosler Partition........3500fps
The .243 Catbird was originally conceived to be an ultra-long range 6mm varmint round, but will work quite well for a deer cartridge also. It is a .270 Winchester case necked down to .243 and blown out with a 35 degree shoulder. This case is delivering some impressive velocities. Our original goal was to get 4000 fps with a 68-70 grain bullet. However, we surpassed this goal with 4100 fps. This cartridge will pack plenty of punch for either long range varmint hunting or medium range deer hunting. Cases for this chambering are quite easy to form. You simply run a .270 Win. case through a Catbird full length sizing die, load it with a reduced load and fire-form it by simply shooting it through your gun. There are two versions of this cartridge. One of them has a tight neck and the other has a standard neck. The cases for the tight necked version must be neck turned before they can be loaded and fired. Once cases have been fire-formed for either version they can be simply reloaded as any other cartridge. While this cartridge may not be for everybody, many people will love the high velocity and the accompanying flat trajectories that can be achieved. This round is quite possibly the fastest 6mm cartridge ever developed. Of course, you have to give something to get something. She is a “barrel eater” expect about 1500 rounds of good accuracy.
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