kamlooky;
Many decades back my wife and I ended up hunting mulies in some steep feeder creek canyons and wanted something that shot a little flatter than the .308 and .30-06 we were using.
After a bit of experimenting and research, I put together a .308 Norma on a Steyr built 98 action which was housed in a Bishop stock. We had Chris Wilcox put on a no-name .308" barrel that was sitting under a late friend's couch for years!
While I don't have any photos of it right now that rifle ended up being a very accurate rig with the 165gr Hornady BT she liked to use on deer back then.
As a by the way, we played with a couple of 7mm Rem Mags at the time, a Ruger and a Savage if memory serves. Try as we might, we were never able to get the same speeds out of them that the Norma could with corresponding weight bullets.
We tried various 150gr, 154gr and 160gr bullets with the powders we could lay hands on then like H-870, H-4831, AA3100 and IMR 4350, but it the 7 Mag wouldn't quite run them as fast as the Norma could run a 165gr.
Why that was I can't say, but when it came time to build a rifle for myself, I ended up having Chris put a new Parker Hale .308" barrel on a tang model 77 Ruger that was originally a .338. I stocked it with a Richard's Microfit blank and it too ended up being a very useful rig.
These days I don't hunt with it as much as I used to, but it was and is a very useful cartridge that is capable of fine field accuracy.
Thanks to all who've responded with their .308 Normas. It's good to see I'm not the only dinosaur left who likes the old round.
I hope you and yours have a good week.
Regards,
Dwayne