And "everyone else" can neither confirm or deny, since they've never actually and will not compare. "I don't think I do" is about as close as it gets, and it is best left that way since truth might not be so fun
But they do seem to have some Camp Perry and Queens Medal candidates in their midst so there is that. Missed callings, alas.
Seems to be a bit of a double standard here. You've made a pronouncement early on about accuracy with big bores vs. smaller ones, and you concluded that pronouncement with a statement to the effect that "we all know it to be true".
I simply read that pronouncement and pointed out that we don't
all know it to be true, in fact some of us feel the exact opposite is true. I explained how I compared the two types of guns/cartridges and felt that my interpretation...different than yours...was the correct one.
You're taking me to task about not having made and documented detailed comparisons, presumably including careful measurements, etc. I didn't do that, not knowing I'd be embroiled in this particular debate...and I wouldn't have done it even had I known what was coming, simply because I was shooting for me, not for an internet debate. A few decades of shooting and observing the results apparently isn't enough to "prove" my conclusions, and that's okay because I don't care about the debate, just about the shooting.
But I'm not sure why my comment and conclusion based upon my own experience bears no weight, and requires stringent evidence and testing to prove I'm right...but your original pronouncement apparently is to be taken as gospel, despite a complete lack of similar hard proof.
I give up. I've absolutely agreed that if we include speed of follow-up shots as one of the criteria, the big guns are at a serious disadvantage. I've absolutely admitted that my choice of guns and cartridges is largely based upon emotional reasons, rather than hard data. And after reading all the back-and-forth between the two sides of the debate, I haven't seen a thing that sways me from my original assertion, which was and is that for the first shot, there is no rational, quantifiable reason for a big gun to be any slower or any less accurate than a smaller one.
Enough derailing for me. The thread is supposed to be about the .300 vs. the .338, and those two are so similar that most folks probably can't even tell which of the two they are shooting without reading the cartridge case or the barrel inscription. Nope, I can't prove that, didn't do tests, won't do tests. It's just a pronouncement, er, sorry...an opinion. No more or less valid than anyone else's, and worth every penny you paid for it.
