The 3006 isn't nearly appealing as it used to be. If you want an all around 30 caliber catridges, the .308 fills the role, as do the 300 magnums. I think people are still buying 30-06's for thier "all around rifle" because they don't know any better.![]()
The 3006 isn't nearly appealing as it used to be. If you want an all around 30 caliber catridges, the .308 fills the role, as do the 300 magnums. I think people are still buying 30-06's for thier "all around rifle" because they don't know any better.![]()
"And of course anything a .30-06 can do the .300 WM can do way better"
Not really,
the 300 win mag has a shorter neck so longer and heavier rounds, especially monometal bullets, may have to be seated deeper into the case,
using up case capacity, the 30'06's longer neck will hold a heavier bullet better than a 300WM.
Not to mention the 30'06 is less expensive to load for.
If your not a reloader, expect to pay up to 50% more for ammo.
With equal bullet weights the 300 WM gives you only about 100 yards more effective range.
A 180 grain bullet drops 24 inches at 400 yards when zeroed at 200 from the 30-06,
the same bullet will drop about 19” with a 300 WM.
If you look at what that 5 inches means, compared to the 57,600 inches that make up 400 yards,
you can see that the advantage isn't enough to brag about.
So much for the huge advantage of a 300 over the 06!
If you are good enough to make accurate hits at 550-600 then the 300 has a slight edge at those ranges, that's about it.
If you reload, the .308 or .30 magnums can do everything the 30-06 can. Really is the only caliber you need.
Fixed it for you![]()
There are calibres that shoot flatter than 30-06, there are cartridges that are more powerful, and there are calibres with less recoil.
A specific caliber might be best for a specific task and one can own many specialized hunting rounds. Or they can own one do everything cartridge like the 30-06 or something with similar characteristics.
However, where you live in canada may effect your personal choices .... a do all gun in hand is great when you might need it too do more than one thing on a single trip like a small caribou, a large Alaskan moose, or some of us that might have an unplanned and unwelcome meet up with a grizzly. Sure, I might carry something bigger for a grizzly, if that’s what I was specifically after, but that do all rifle will handle even that, if necessary.
Many hunters inherit an old hunting gun from a father, grandfather, uncle, or older friend ..... any do all rifle caliber will do just find and in those cases, I don’t see any reason to purchase yet another safe occupier.




























