What bullet/powder combo are you using in your 9.3x57?Solution:
1) Keep one of your rifles in its original .30-06 chambering
2) have the other re-barrelled to .338-06
3) buy another rifle
4) have that one re-barrelled to .35 Whelen
5) buy another rifle already chambered in 9.3x62
It all depends on where you hunt. When I lived out west, a .338-06 made sense, for its flatter trajectory & more available premium bullets. Where I live now, the shots are 35-70 yards MAX!. As a result, the '62 works, but then again, so does one of my 9.3x57 chambered Husqvarnas, or a .30-30, .308 WCF, .303 British, 8x57, &c., &c., &c.

Data shown is for the smaller .338 Federal case (based on the 308 Winchester) If the data was for the larger .338-06 case, it would be different with more favorable data for the .338-06.The 338-06 does everything the 35 whelen does, except throw 35cal bullets. If throwing 35cal bullets is the goal the 338 is pure rubbish.
The 338 has the edge ballistically though - when comparing bullets of the same weight and cartridges of the came pressure the 338 will have higher velocity and more energy at range due to higher BCs. A similarly designed 225gr 35cal is simply less aerodynamic than the same 225gr in a 338cal, so even IF your 35 starts a bit faster it won't take that long for the 338 to come out on top.
Here's a visual. Even though it is starting 100fps slower, the 338 200gr fusion catches up to the 35cal at 200yds. (Note that is a 338federal load, Federal Premium doesn't list a 338-06 load)
View attachment 1010525
But the 338 doesn't poke 35cal holes, nor am I aware of any cheap 338cal pistol bullets for plinking loads. If either of those are important then a Whelen makes sense.
Because I can is also a perfectly good answer to "why that cartridge?"
You can get a complete Husqvarna in 9.3x62 from Intersurplus for less than it would cost to rebarrel an existing rifle. I would leave the .30/06's as they are and buy another rifle.Get a 9.3x62 barrel on there and call it a day!
That's me, I have one of each in the safe. However, no 35 or 338 cartridges, biggest is 9.3/.366".I know a guy with a 6mm-06AI, 25-06, 6.5-06, 270, 280, 30-06, 8mm-06, 338-06. 35 Whelen, 9.3x62 and a 375-06. Just get one of each and try them all.
ding dingFor me it's the more about the 'rifle' than just the caliber.

I've owned both. Guntech is correct, though the difference is slight. I lean more towards the bigger hole better theory. Having said that, I no longer have a 35 Whelen (it doesnt do anything my 350 Rem Mag wont do) but I still have a 338-06. - danHuh? 338 06 bullet weight is higher? SD is the only aspect 338 06 beats 35W at and so what? Whelen shoots bigger bullets better than the 06 and hits with a lot more energy.
Please post your 06 comparatives to the 35W using 225 and 250 gr bullets. Or you could post all of the higher energy stats with same bullet size as 35W.
Maybe the most important stat is where the 2 chamberings sit today. The A Square is basically extinct. The Whelen just keeps chugging along.
not complicated. blind mag or drop box, have him check the cartridge feeding. Find someone local, its an easy job. is all i need to do is get a replacement barrel and have a gunsmith spin it on and check it out? any more complicated than doing that?? is there a gunsmith that you would recomend to do this changeover. thanks in advance.




























