- Location
- Prince Albert, Sk
In all seriousness, the 30 cal bullets drop like a stone , very hard to hit anything with any accuracy, and the .277 cal are way too light for N.American game, 7mm chamberings are what should be looked at here. 
In all seriousness, the 30 cal bullets drop like a stone , very hard to hit anything with any accuracy, and the .277 cal are way too light for N.American game, 7mm chamberings are what should be looked at here.![]()
I'm gonna weigh in here as well on the '06.
I have fired the .270, I own a .308 and 2 '06s. Luckily the .270, the .308, and one '06 were the same rifle, so comparative testing was available.
I have noticed that my .308 delivers a more noticeable felt recoil than either the .270 or the .30-06. There has been no noticeable difference to game. They each dropped game the same way under similar circumstances.
And as for action length, I have never really noticed a difference when I am hunting. Action is cycled automatically, without thinking. And I haven't needed to take a second, instant, follow-up shot for a number of years now. One shot, animal down within seconds. No shots at game running away, so action length doesn't matter as much as confidence in where you put the bullet and that once there, it will do the job.
I used to think it mattered between those two choices (30-06 / 270), in the real world it doesn't. I have shot both extensively, also shot and killed enough animals with both to know that it doesn't.
Pick a good bullet and put it where it counts and animals die, period.
This is true. 270 and 30-06 are going to kill deer dead and you can't go wrong with either of them for knockdown and accuracy, but whyyyyyy would you punish yourself with a long action cartridge when you can go .308 is mind boggling. The only reason I can see going 30-06 or 270 is if you inherit the rifle, get a good deal on one, or just generally feel familiar with the platform. I hunt only with rifles I know inside and out, and I don't mean stripping them down to clean. I like to know how to take every part off, the ROT of the rifling, the type of lube it likes, and ballistics for whatever commercial ammo I'm using at different ranges.
If you go 30-06 over other 30cals for extra power, why not just go 300win mag. You're gaining what, 5% on .308?
Last year we drove around until we saw a deer on the logging roads. Took us about 20 minutes, so that worked out alright.
I also didn't realize that taking the bayo off a mosin 1944 carbine makes it shoot 4 inches off center, so I had to take a couple shots.
and then we read in a different post............
I guess there are those who'll substitute the spray and pray method in a weaker caliber in exchange for the unmanageable recoil of a 270 or 30-06.![]()
Right, sorry. Short actions are for those of us with stubby T-Rex arms.You're slipping!!You forgot about the punishing LLLLLoooooooggggg action cartridge bolt pull
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This is true. 270 and 30-06 are going to kill deer dead and you can't go wrong with either of them for knockdown and accuracy, but whyyyyyy would you punish yourself with a long action cartridge when you can go .308 is mind boggling. The only reason I can see going 30-06 or 270 is if you inherit the rifle, get a good deal on one, or just generally feel familiar with the platform. I hunt only with rifles I know inside and out, and I don't mean stripping them down to clean. I like to know how to take every part off, the ROT of the rifling, the type of lube it likes, and ballistics for whatever commercial ammo I'm using at different ranges.
If you go 30-06 over other 30cals for extra power, why not just go 300win mag. You're gaining what, 5% on .308?
CZ 858, CZ SP-01 Tactical, Win94 30-30, P.H.#4 MK2, Mosin 1944 Carbine, Norinco m305, Norinco JW-25a, Savage MK2f, Ruger 10/22 SS, Remington 870 Express, Henry AR-7.



























