Long Range Rifle Part 2

pitpenz83

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I have decided between the .260 and the 6.55x55(winning right now) and want to know what is the difference in recoil and pros and cons of each cartridge.

What gun would you buy with a $1000-1500 budget?
 
I would buy an old 6.5, buy a new barrel and have the action worked. Thats only
based on the budget you have given. Otherwise RPA action and go to town!!!
 
I would go with the 260 in a Remington or Savage action

buy an old beater that is 308 put a new 260 match barrel on it and go shooting!
 
If ever you get your hands in some dough..this one is a .260

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Tikka Varmint in 6.5X55 swede.

Nothing wrong with the 260, I just have a nostalgic respect for what the Swede has proven over and over for more than 100 years.
 
Long range rifle

On the Chuck Hawks page he summed it up that the 6.55x55 will do everything and more than a .260 but he doesn't say too much about the difference in recoil etc. He just prefers the 6.55x55 because it will shoot just as good and has a little more options on the high end of bullets.
 
Start be deciding what action you plan to use. Then measure the internal length of the mag. The Swede is sig longer then the 260 and may not feed out of a 2.85" mag. The Savage center feed will hold a 3.00" cartridge so can work with either.

The Tikka in a Swede is a no brainer and will shoot very well.

The Rem is the only option for the 260. Haven't seen another rifle in this cal for quite a while. Rem mags tend to be short.

For general plinking with ease of components, the 260 is my choice. In fact, it would be my 6.5 Mystic/260 AI.

They are all very similar so pick your case and enjoy a wonderfully shooting rifle. All variants can be made to shoot the same. The Swede and 260AI will be faster then the 260 but that really only matters if you compete.

Jerry
 
On the Chuck Hawks page he summed it up that the 6.55x55 will do everything and more than a .260 but he doesn't say too much about the difference in recoil etc. He just prefers the 6.55x55 because it will shoot just as good and has a little more options on the high end of bullets.

In the same gun (weight, design, barrel length etc), pushing the same bullets at the same speeds, there will be NO difference in recoil. The 260 fits better in short actions, I would go with that in a Savage or Rem, put some decent glass on it and start shooting. I like the 6.5x55 (I have three of them at the moment), but for simplicities' sake, go with the 260. - dan
 
I would generally agree with Dan, with one exception. Older actions with a bit of "slop" in the boltface like the 1917 Enfield or the 98 Mauser will work with both 6.5x55 and .308-based cases. I know. I've done it.

The same is not true of tighter modern actions like the Remington 700 or the Savage, however. In those cases, a boltface that works for a .308 would likely be a hair too tight for a 6.5x55 to work reliably.
 
I would generally agree with Dan, with one exception. Older actions with a bit of "slop" in the boltface like the 1917 Enfield or the 98 Mauser will work with both 6.5x55 and .308-based cases. I know. I've done it.

The same is not true of tighter modern actions like the Remington 700 or the Savage, however. In those cases, a boltface that works for a .308 would likely be a hair too tight for a 6.5x55 to work reliably.

Agreed, It is not well known, but the 6.5X55 is a hair bigger at the base than a .308 so those contemplating a build on a 700 LA would benefit from opening the bolt face. Buying a factory gun chambered in the Swede would not be an issue.
 
Agreed, It is not well known, but the 6.5X55 is a hair bigger at the base than a .308 so those contemplating a build on a 700 LA would benefit from opening the bolt face. Buying a factory gun chambered in the Swede would not be an issue.

Measure some North American 6.5 Swede brass sometime, there's no difference between it and 308 cases by the same maker. SOME Euro brass is bigger, and the actual dimensions called for are larger, but they make the brass the way they make the brass. As for shooting 6.5 in a 260 and vice versa, if you have the right combination of loose components you can maybe make 260 fire in a 6.5, be a little tougher going the other way though. - dan
 
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