280 improved ackley

mackillan

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I was reading in a magazine that this caliber can get up to speeds of 3100 without the magnum recoil. How would it comepare to a 257 mag, a 270 or a 7mm rem mag?
 
With what bullet weight? It doesn't matter how much taper a case has, or what degree of shoulder it sports, it basically comes down to case capacity. A 280 AI does NOT have more case capacity then a 257 Wby or a 7 Rem Mag, and therefore will not outperform those calibers with all other variable sbeing equal. It does have more case capacity then a 270 Win, and therefore, all else being equal, will outperform that caliber. There are a lot of other things that weigh into this issue though, bullet weight and design, barrel length, fast or slow barrel, etc. FWIW - dan
 
There seems to be a lot of interest in this chambering. We sell more Cooper 52's in this than any other. Almost as many as all other '06 based chamberings put together. A lot of guys are using it for sheep. Almost the performance of a 7 mag with the smaller, lighter cartridges and rifle.
 
mine is a rem blued synthetic mountain rifle. not quite as fast as a rem 7 but close with a little less recoil. it has a kdf brake too maybe why the recoil seems better. lighter and less recoil whats not to like. prefers 140 ab or bt and a whole case full of rel 22. cronys over 3200. excelent case life but the 280ai marked cases are a little pricey.
 
excelent case life but the 280ai marked cases are a little pricey.

They're not really too bad. We carry the Noslers and its 50 to a box and they are sized and weight sorted already. $67.99 A lot of guys are getting them and they don't have to wrry about the data stamps and headstamps not matching for overseas travel.
 
A .280 Rem in a Model 700 Mountain rifle is a magical combination. Ackley-izing it only makes even more magical and without the unnecessary fat of a maga-numb chambering.
 
I was reading in a magazine that this caliber can get up to speeds of 3100 without the magnum recoil. How would it comepare to a 257 mag, a 270 or a 7mm rem mag?

A .257 Wby has virtually no recoil (to me) and with 100gr TSX at 3500fps it makes a fine long range round.

A .270 has very little recoil, and I'd love to try one with 110gr TSX at 3500fps. That seems, on paper at least, to offer one of the best combos of bullet diameter, velocity, flat trajectory and powder charge out there.

The 7mm RM is a step up from the .280 AI.
 
In my 24" 280 Ackley, 120 grainers clock 3370 fps, 140 grainers go high 31's, and 150 grainers clock 3050. It won't match a 7mag. But if a 150 grain 7mm TSX at 3050 isn't enough, the answer isn't more speed, it's a whole lot more bullet diameter and bullet weight.

It's a great cartridge, perhaps even the slightest bit better than a standard 280!
 
I know a guy who shoots a 280 AI. Swears up and down by it. Personally I would never shoot an AI unless it was single shot or a non-staggered mag.
 
A .280 Rem in a Model 700 Mountain rifle is a magical combination.

Too bad they wouldn't chamber a SPS SS or the CDL SF in .280 (that would be sweet:cool:). They did the LSS last year, why not keep chambering for it?
 
Too bad they wouldn't chamber a SPS SS or the CDL SF in .280 (that would be sweet:cool:). They did the LSS last year, why not keep chambering for it?


Because Remington never makes any sense with deciding which calibers go in which models. Seems like they always chamber the coolest models in plain jane calibers only.
 
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