Reloading the 6.5X55
It has been a few years but I reworked (bent bolts, cut and recrowned barrel, sporterized stock, bedded action, etc.) about 14 of these 6.5's, (M96s & 38s) as a hobby (got supervision from a gunsmith friend for the tough parts). And I took a number of deer with one over the years. They tended to be very accurate and liked somewhat slower powders like 4350. But looking at my records, I see that I didn't go outside the data manuals available at the time, much as people are suggesting one shouldn't here. Velocities were fairly low in comparison to present day standards. But I remember the rifle as being a far better instrument for taking game than the ballistics would suggest, i.e. a good killer. Oddly enough I was talking to a friend about this today. He still has one of the rifles I worked on, and after taking approximately 20 deer over the last however many years he has the same opinion. In fact, I tested reloads for him last week and the rifle shot a little better than MOA with its original load. (Velocity with the 140 grain Speer was around 2500 fps give or take a bit.) I think quality control procedures required them to shoot 2 MOA at 100 meters with open sites. I don't remember many of them, with a couple of notable exceptions, that wouldn't beat this quite easily using a scope. I think most people would settle on a 140 grain bullet for the caliber when hunting today, but don't ignore the 160 grain Hornady RN if it is still marketed. Some of those old rifles just loved this bullet. The twist in them was very fast, maybe around 1 in 7.9 if memory serves. Also friends told me that the 160 g bullet gave superior penetration on bigger ungulates like moose. I didn't test this myself, preferring a larger rifle for moose, though can attest to accuracy with the bullet. Of course, it wasn't going much faster than 2350 fps in my reloads. It's nice to hear some of these M96's are still sparking some interest. Fred