North American rounds and their European/Continental Counter parts

I think that the 6.5x68 is probably closer to the 264 Win Mag. The 8x68s is reportedly pretty hot
 
Is 8x68 factory ammo usually 200+ grains?

Curious about the reference to the 7.62x39 as a fjudd caliber, anyone know what rifle bjubba and the boys would take afield in this chambering?
 
In a 30 cal fudd round, im thinking either 06 or 30/30.

The closest straight up equivalent would be 7x57/7-08. Believe the x57 has about 1gr more powder capacity, but is pretty much a reloader caliber both for availability and old/weak actions.

The 9.3x62 comparison to 338 win mag(my favorite caliber) is totally off. The 338 has it performance wise, but then again the 9.3 throws bigger medicine....meh a wash.

Cartridges look different, but check out velocity numbers between 308 and 303 british in 180gr.
 
The obsolete 375 H&H and the New King of the 375 calibers- the 375 Ruger.

There have been a few other North American 375's like the Weatherbys and RUM but for the most part they failed.
 
I always thought 7x64 with 175 grains was the euro “30-06” for modern hunters in Central Europe, I could be way off base
 
In a 30 cal fudd round, im thinking either 06 or 30/30.

The closest straight up equivalent would be 7x57/7-08. Believe the x57 has about 1gr more powder capacity, but is pretty much a reloader caliber both for availability and old/weak actions.

The 9.3x62 comparison to 338 win mag(my favorite caliber) is totally off. The 338 has it performance wise, but then again the 9.3 throws bigger medicine....meh a wash.

Cartridges look different, but check out velocity numbers between 308 and 303 british in 180gr.

some lightweight bullet with modern powder will get close to the 338 area.

I always thought 7x64 with 175 grains was the euro “30-06” for modern hunters in Central Europe, I could be way off base

it is.
 
Mainstream commercial euro cartridges are 6.5x55, 7x64, 9.3x62, but they also love the traditional N/A cartridges like 222Rem, 243Win, 30/06, they don't get as carried away as we do with minimal caliber and cartridge differences, or the long action/short action arguments we have here. If it works it works, why change it.
 
This be mostly on, though the 9.3x57 has the advantage of tossing 270-286+ gr boolits in the bolt rifles they be chambered in. The 358 Win being chambered in shorter actions is best suited to projectiles in the 200-250 gr range. The shorter neck of the 358 hinders its' use with the heavy projectiles above 250 gr too boot. Both the 9.3x57 & 6.5 Swede cartridges are the ones I prefer as they normally run at lower factory pressures than the 308 Win based cartridges.

As fer the Whelly/9.3 comparo, ye can't go wrong with either one in my book. ;)

I have never seen a factory round of 9.3x57 but it's a super cartridge for the reloader. You can load waaaay past the anemic CIP 38K standard in strong actions. And it loads down well for reduced loads too.
 
I have never seen a factory round of 9.3x57 but it's a super cartridge for the reloader. You can load waaaay past the anemic CIP 38K standard in strong actions. And it loads down well for reduced loads too.

Tradex is the only place I've ever seen it....Norma for $80/20. Definitely a reloader cartridge, 8x57 brass is not hard to find.
 
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