Is the 6.5 x 55 Swede a do it all cartridge

struff55

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Coyotes to moose ?
Or is that a stretch
Thinking of taking one for a ride it will be a modern version with hand loads
Anyone with experience
 
Absolutely. With a 24" tube, good brass and reloads ranging from 85 grains to 156/160 grain bullets, you can do it all. Quality bullets are they key for anything up to Moose, wouldn't use it on the large bears, black beat you're fine.
 
I haven't shot a moose with mine yet but I sure do intend to.

This year it's 100gr TTSX and 127gr LRX
 
I was always all for the swede + good bullet for game up to moose. This year I took my moose with my 6.5 prc and 140gr accubond. It did the trick, but not nearly as quickly as the bigger calibers Iv used. The shot was 75 yards, centre lung broad side, and was at least a full minute before he expired. It will work for moose, but in my new opinion, there are better options. Perhaps the 160gr Hornady within reasonable distance might be getting there.

I took my first goat with a 6.5x55 ai using 160gr hornadys. That setup worked perfectly at 100 yards.

Iv ran a 6.5 swede in a t3 for a number of years now, it’s probably the most consistent rifle I own.
 
I have shot Whitetails, Muleys, Blacktails, Moose, Elk, Black Bear, Bighorn Sheep, Coyotes,
Wolves and smaller varmints with the 6.5x55 Swede.

Most have been taken with 125 or 140 grain Partitions. Never felt undergunned.
It's No "miracle" chambering. The 7x57 has been equally effective for me, as has the 30-06 and 270.

It just gets the job done when you put a decent bullet in the right place. Dave.
 
Coyotes to moose ?
Or is that a stretch
Thinking of taking one for a ride it will be a modern version with hand loads
Anyone with experience

With bullets available in 85 gr to 160, and the velocity and range and energy retention with the high BC bullets; here in North America, it will work for about anything other than rats in your basement. LOL.
 
Yes absolutely it could be a do all cartridge. Especially if you handload. Might not be all that friendly for coyote hides but shouldn't be too bad.

85-90 gr generally don't come out the other side. if they do, you do have a bit of a mess.
 
Lol struff, you know my opinion on the 6.5X55 ;)

She'll do just fine for anything on this side of the pond. I just finished cooking up a load with my lady's '96 sporter using a 120gr Hornady at a leisurely 2680 FPS- recoil is mild, and trajectory is flat enough for any distance she'll shoot.

If you really want to chase the big stuff, a 120gr mono bullet (TTSX, CX, GMX) or a 140gr Partition or A-Frame is all you need. In a modern rifle, 140's can be pushed right dang near 3000 FPS, leaving little to be desired even compared to the "modern" 6.5, 6.8, and 7mm cartridges.
 
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