This one time, you are correct. It wasn’t the point. The point was for you to spew self high five drivel.
Don’t break your arm patting yourself on the back.
Comprehend that?
R.
Maybe the question should be "Do you really need a standard cartridge?"![]()
As a reloader that would be my conclusion if ever I were limited to one, two or three rifles.
Magnums can be loaded down for velocity and recoil, reloading also closes the gap in cost to not much of anything. Bullet choice and placement will also take care of meat concerns. Barrel life doesn't come into play except for a very few shooters so they are all tied at infinity for everyone else.
Maybe the question should be "Do you really need a standard cartridge?"![]()
Do you really need a magnum
As a reloader that would be my conclusion if ever I were limited to one, two or three rifles.
The very 1st. thing to concider is ; Can you regularly practice with the recoil of a Magnum Calibre ?
If not , then you will never shoot well with it , whether you need it or not.
So pick no cal. that you can't practice with.
Cooey though I agree with you in theory.....this is a half truth.
If you are a serious hunter and can afford it the thing to do it buy an identical rifle in a small caliber cartridge for practice.
For instance if you shoot a 338 WIN on elk/moose and buy one in .243 or 7mm-08 to shoot at the range and or at smaller animals.
I have a mangum 26 Nosler Christensen Arms. Its too loud, expensive and muzzle blast is crazy for long range sessions (I limit myself to 5-10 rounds) but I also have their .22 which is very similar and use that for practice.
Just something to consider.
I agree with that statement but the problem i end up having is i get efficient with the smaller cartridge and realize i don't need the magnum.
I agree with that statement but the problem i end up having is i get efficient with the smaller cartridge and realize i don't need the magnum.
I may be mistaken... but isn't your smaller cartridge 8 x 57?
Which was utilized on warplanes and armored vehicles?
Smaller cartridge, huh?
No worry, I've 3 of them...and looking to ream one our to 8 x 63 Patron...but it's not a magnum lol. Just hits like one.
LOL.
I get that but there are definite benefits to a magnum. Roy Weatherby felt that the shock of a magnum caliber travelling at high speed was 'crippling' enough to avoid lost animals when situations dictated somehting less than ideal happening, which anyone with experience understands "is part of hunting".
I think that many here (not all) who are saying "you don't need a magnum" have perhaps not been in situations where it is really beneficial. And I mean no disrespect by that.
For instance, you are on a Marco Polo hunt in Kyrgyzstan and your ram is walking towards China and you have literally one chance to anchor the ram you would want a big magnum that will shock the animal at long range and kill it or give you time to send another couple rounds at it.
Or you are on a Stone ram that you have been after for 18 days of sleeping under the stars and out of food and you have one day left. You want that ram to be dead or anchored even if you don't make the ideal shot because you are tired, wet, hungry, injured, etc, etc.
I am not saying a magnum is a good replacement for field craft, getting close, shot placement, etc. I don't think it is.
But when the chips are down and you can shoot a .243 just as well as you shoot a .300 RUM I am taking the RUM all day long. There is a reason why many of the most prolific trophy hunters in the latter half of the 20th century shoot magnums.
I shoot a 26 Nosler for this exact reason. It is the most powerful mountain gun I have lots of experience shooting at all ranges accurately. It absolutely flattens game animals. I can only imagine what a 30 Nosler would do firing a premium bullet from an accurate rifle with a good shooter.
I once chased a wounded Mid Asian Ibex for around 5 hours after another hunter wounded it with a .270 Winchester. I killed it at 644 yards with a single shot from my 26 Nosler as it was walking almost at the top of a mountain. I shooting from below and had no time. It was equal parts luck and skill and I hit the animal high on the shoulder/neck area.
I firmly believe that if I had my old .308 I would not have dropped that animal in its tracks at that distance.
30-06 is more than enough for most hunts & most hunters.
Cartridge selection is the least important factor in a successful hunt.
Remember that power is proportional to the velocity^3. This means it takes a lot of power (i.e. gunpowder) to get a relatively small increase in velocity.
Recoil is a problem because flinching is a problem.
Magnums do help keep you flatter & faster out to 400+ yards. A bullet traveling 2800 fps takes 0.43 seconds to go 400 yards. That's a lot of time for an animal to take a step. Ask yourself why you would consider going beyond 400 yards. Conventional wisdom is "don't".
Meat damage is a thing. If terminal velocity greater than 3000 fps, you are going to get wastage. That said, "deader" is better than "not quite dead" - so a counter-argument there.
Where do you hunt? Magnums are best suited for prairie or mountain terrain.
Some shooters are more than up to taking on magnum calibers and longer distances. More power to them.
But first, make sure you can out shoot the capabilities of a 6.5 or 7x57 or 30-06 before you look at a transition.