No doubt the 375 is capable but man that's a lot of recoil to deal with in a hunting weight rifle. I know how I feel after a dozen rounds off the bench with mine....let alone shooting two or three times that many prone.
Yup, I never shoot paper past 200 yards...it's all gong after that under real field conditions at a variety of distances, wind directions, inclines and shooting positions. I could care less about group size other than the rifle is capable of shooting a sufficiently tight group to be useful at extended ranges. All I care about in long-range hunting practice is hearing the gong ring. What you can do off the bench means next to nothing in the field at long ranges...that's why you rarely see serious long-range hunters at the range.
Keep one fact in mind:
A heavier bullet has more velocity retention AND higher BC than a lighter bullet.
Well, you got me there.
What I was trying to say (I dont speak too good and write even worster)
Is that the range is a good place to take out the some of the human factor.
Use a good front and rear rest, let the rifle tell you where that first cold shot
will land with the ammo you are using.
But you're right, at the range I usually fire a few "dirty-up" rounds before getting down and serious.
But, knowing where that first shot hits is important, I dont want to warm up my rifle again every
target change. I can tell my rifle will shoot about 1" +/- left @300 yds if at ambient temperature
(after my dirty-up to get rid of any oil, rags, and tid bits that may be in the barrel)
So I just compensate..a tad on a cold shot, a bit less on second and back to normal after that,
it's not an exact science but it helps my first group.
I can only ASSUME a hunter relies on that first cold shot, so I can also ASSUME it must be important.
After assuming all that, I might as well ASSUME that a long range hunter has "dirtied-up" his
barrel and got rid of anything that may be lurking in there, waiting to mess up that first trajectory.
An assumption based on an assumption, followed by an assumption is called what again?
I always hunt with a fouled barrel and I don't own a rifle that has a noticeable shift in POI from cold to warm.....I do have one that starts to fly after three though. Perhaps I'm just lucky.
Once I have settled on a round and sighted in, there is no cleaning of the bore until after whatever particular season is over. Then it gets a bore snake once through. The outside gets cleaned and oiled as needed.My Nemesis get a light patch every 200 rounds, never seen a metallic brush in its first 600 rounds and i dont see when it will need it... JP.
One really shouldn't assume on others behaviour! to assume make an ... ass ... out of ... u ... and ... me. "ass u me"
Uhm, no.
BC isn't a function of bullet weight. It can correlate in some aspects, but it isn't a direct transfer.
Bullet shape has more influence on BC.
Kind of throws the rest of your theories into question.......
Uhm, no.
BC isn't a function of bullet weight. It can correlate in some aspects, but it isn't a direct transfer.
Bullet shape has more influence on BC.
Kind of throws the rest of your theories into question.......
It's not fair to compare a 185 grain Boat Tail VLD to a 200 grain soft point flat based hunting bullet. All things being equal though, the heavier bullet will ALWAYS have a higher BC meaning the bullet design is the same except for weight - meaning length of bearing surface.
I wasn't the one making a generalized grandiose statement that is incorrect. But if you are absolutely positive you are right, then by all means, hold a sermon and pound the pulpit.
But before you take a sip of water and launch into your diatribe, maybe compare the 155 Scenar to the 167 Scenar....
I have been thinking I should build the rifle into a dedicated long range rifle. By long range I mean 500 to 600 yards. With enough energy at 600 yards to down an elk or moose with the right bullet and the right shot placement of course.
My thoughts one the rifle would be something like this.
Savage 110 re-barreled to 338-06
Barrel to be a medium heavy sportter contour at 26" with recessed crown.
Trigger set to 1.5 pound pull
Piller bedded into ether a Boyds laminate or a Bell & Carlson stock with free floating barrel.
Thinking of 180 - 200 grain Barns or Nosler bullets.
Or should I just go to the 338 Win. Mag. Maybe even drop down to the 7MM Rem. Mag. I know someone will suggest the 300 Win Mag but sorry to say I have no interest in the 300 Win Mag.
Give me your thoughts as all suggestions are appreciated




























