I think I worded that one weird! Oops.Interesting………..
I think I worded that one weird! Oops.Interesting………..
338 Lapua.
BUT, please spend some time at the range and get very comfortable with it BEFORE you take that 600 yard shot.
Even a very large moose is a very tiny target at 600 yards.
Flame on !!!!!!!!!!
I would actually agree with a .338 Lapua. It is an awesome caliber!! PERIOD. However, for the recoil concious... Take a look at the 6.5X.284 Nearly the same as a .300 mag and just a fraction of the punishment. Nice to hear from 'Sunray'?!! Wondering if he's ever launched a bullet at an animal or just plays X box all day.... Do yourself a favour and take all advice with a 'grain of salt'. 99% of gun nutz will offer something useful. I support and appreciate that 99%. It is up to you to 'filter' the other 1%!![]()
There are quite a few gun/cartridge combinations that can be used effectively on game out to 600 yards. There are VERY few hunters who should ever attempt anything over about 300 yards.
"...a dedicated long range rifle..." Nobody should ever take a 600 yard shot on large game. No hunting cartridge has the energy for a clean kill at those distances. And the bullet drop is enormous.
A .338-06 loaded with a heavy bullet will allow you to enjoy .300 Winchester recoil without the performance
With todays new powders had high BC bullets combined with the new range finders and optics ... 600 yards IS NOT LONG RANGE , I would not even hesitate to take game at 600 yards even in a 15mph cross wind.
If its in your budget buy a Sendero in 7rem mag and a used Night Force nxs 250 and a new Leica 1600B. get a cheap wind meter put in a few months this winter practicing at 500 - 600 yards and go shoot what ever you want next fall.
THE END
And sunray adds to his immense internet-##### with yet another pearl of un-wisdom.
.
Thank you all for the input. Their seems to be a lot of you pushing the .264 and .264 calibers. Made be think about the 6.5-06 and the 280 Remington with 140 -150 grain bullets.
I would also like it to be clarified that I will not take a 600 yard shot unless I am 100% sure of myself and can place the shot where it needs to be. I have passed on shots before and will again because I was not comfortable or was unsure of the shot or my rest. I have a few spots (open fields) where a 600 yard shot maybe a possibility.
Just want to take a second to thank 'Sunray' (for the entertainment) Apparently he's been in the 'sun' way too long. Please do some reading (and shooting and hunting...) before you voice opinions based on nothing. Indeed the 'average' hunter would be pushing it at 600yds - but don't assume that many aren't capable. If you need a list of calibers that are also capable.. Please do a little research. The rest of us would appreciate that.
PS: google search: 6.5x.284 You might learn something.
Thank you all for the input. Their seems to be a lot of you pushing the .264 and .264 calibers. Made be think about the 6.5-06 and the 280 Remington with 140 -150 grain bullets.
I would also like it to be clarified that I will not take a 600 yard shot unless I am 100% sure of myself and can place the shot where it needs to be. I have passed on shots before and will again because I was not comfortable or was unsure of the shot or my rest. I have a few spots (open fields) where a 600 yard shot maybe a possibility.
Thank you all for the input. Their seems to be a lot of you pushing the .264 and .264 calibers. Made be think about the 6.5-06 and the 280 Remington with 140 -150 grain bullets.
I would also like it to be clarified that I will not take a 600 yard shot unless I am 100% sure of myself and can place the shot where it needs to be. I have passed on shots before and will again because I was not comfortable or was unsure of the shot or my rest. I have a few spots (open fields) where a 600 yard shot maybe a possibility.
Thank you all for the input. Their seems to be a lot of you pushing the .264 and .264 calibers. Made be think about the 6.5-06 and the 280 Remington with 140 -150 grain bullets.
I would also like it to be clarified that I will not take a 600 yard shot unless I am 100% sure of myself and can place the shot where it needs to be. I have passed on shots before and will again because I was not comfortable or was unsure of the shot or my rest. I have a few spots (open fields) where a 600 yard shot maybe a possibility.
Keep one fact in mind:
With equal energy at the muzzle, heavy and slow will beat light and fast when it comes to bullet drop.
A heavier bullet has more velocity retention AND higher BC than a lighter bullet.
The line where a heavier bullet starts to catch a smaller faster one depends on the caliber
you can say that a rule of thumb is somewhere around 5-600 yards, up until that point
the small and fast bullet has a superior trajectory.
In long range shooting, you want to use the heaviest possible bullet for your twist and caliber that will maintain acceptable accuracy.
I'm guessing that when it comes to long range hunting more factors enters the equation: Lethality, energy, ethics, etc.
Yes Yes so true i used to use a 7mm rem. mag with 140gr compressed load...................now a 375H&H for the open as hold over is easy and less bullet drift




























