I have a 6.5mm barrel set aside. I am unsure as to what to chamber this barrel in.
I have of course mulled over the 6.5X47 and 6.5-284 among others including some wildcats.
I will be using this for F-Class for Long Range (700-900m+)
Here are my requirements:
Inherently Accurate
Good Barrel Life
Easy to load for (not finicky)
Shoots well out to 1200yds
Let me know what you would build or have built for this discipline and WHY or why you wouldn't build it again if that's the case.
Richard
Richard, I apologize for re-quoting your entire posting, but it is quite some number of pages back, and your post is so to-the-point that everything in it is relevant.
Let me try to convince you that you should relent on your requirement for "good barrel life", and simply suck it up and build a 6.5-.284.
If you want a competitive F/Open rifle, you will be shooting against a field full of 6.5-.284s, some of which will be unbelievably accurate, and fired by absolutely first-rate shooters. You might also be a first-rate shooter, as good as the very best shooter on the line, and firing a rifle fully as accurate as the very best one on the line, but, if your rifle is just a little bit "second best" as far as wind drift performance goes, you are working with a handicap that will slowly grind against you. And "slowly grinding against you" is how Vegas makes money over the long haul, inexorably and unstoppably. Fortunately in the case of F/Open rifle shooting, you get to decide if you play on the wrong side of House Odds, or if you get to play Even Odds.
So you really need to decide whether you want a fully-competitive long range F/Open rifle that is fully competitive, or whether you want "only" a nice high performance 6.5mm long range rifle (which will still outperform a .308 target rifle by miles). Both are good rifles to have and to shoot - but be clear when you make your decision, what it is you are choosing to do.
If you want a fully-competitive F/Open rifle, there are really only two choices that I know of. Either the 6.5-.284 firing 139-142gr bullets like everbody else is shooting, or the .284-class 7mm rifles firing 175-180gr bullets, like a number of people seem to be going towards.
With respect to barrel life, I don't fully believe the wide gulf in reported barrel life between a 6.5-.284 and the other slightly-smaller cased 6.5s. If a 6.5-.284 really is wearing out after 800-1200 rounds, there's no way that a .260 Rem can achieve over 2000 rounds of barrel life when burning only five grains less powder and coming within 75fps of the 6.5-.284. Either the 6.5-.284's life is understated, or the .260's is overstated. (Barrel life is a really hard thing to nail down objectively).
Remember too that a barrel isn't a permanent part of a rifle, it is an expendable, consumable part, and not a terribly expensive part either. For a long-life cartridge like a .308, barrel wear is going to cost you 10-15c per shot. For a high-performance cartridge like a 6.5-.284, it is going to cost 30-40c per shot. The high performance of the 6.5-.284 (just over half the wind drift of a .308) clearly comes at a price, but it isn't _that_ unreasonable a price to consider paying, when you consider the relative cost of barrel wear versus ammo costs. (It's even worse when you consider your other per-shot cost, but that's not usually a fun exercise to do!)
*All* of your other requirements are extremely important, especially "inherently accurate" and "easy to load for (not finicky)". Make sure that you get these, otherwise you will be unhappy. Voice of experience here, I wasted over four years trying to shoot F/Open with unconventional 6.5mm rifles, a 6.5-06 for a couple of years and then a 6.5-08 for a couple more. While they were accurate enough for Target Rifle shooting, they were clearly uncompetitive for F/Open back in the '98-'02 timeframe, and they definitely held me back (the 'bad news' is that good F/Open rifles are substantially better now, so the standard of competition are even higher!). Trust me when I say that you really, really don't want to be shooting a 3/4MOA rifle with mediocre velocity spreads, it just isn't fun...
If this 6.5 rifle will not be your only rifle (it sounds like you already have a first rate 6BR), then that's even better. Even if a 6.5-.284 really only does last you 1,000 rounds, you can fire your 6BR at the short and mid ranges most of the time, perhaps using your 6.5 for unusually tricky conditions. And shoot your 6.5 most of the time at the longer ranges, but you can still shoot your 6BR at the longs with probably no loss of competitiveness on the easy days (which actually do happen! ;-).