I live and hunt in Alberta farm country. A quarter section is roughly 440 yards from fence line to fence line. I'll let your imagination do the rest.
I think you're thinking about a cross-fenced quarter. A whole quarter is 1/2 mile by 1/2 mile.
I live and hunt in Alberta farm country. A quarter section is roughly 440 yards from fence line to fence line. I'll let your imagination do the rest.
Whenever I am out shooting or even just walking around out in the boonies,I seem to have a habit of pacing distances off for some reason.One thing that always surprises me is how often it is very easy to either overestimate or underestimate the distance from one spot to another one.One thing I know for sure,a distance of say 500 yards,is farther out than most people realise,especially when it comes to shooting.It's amazing how many people don't know how far a mile is, not that it's a bad thing. 2 quarters sections..
Whenever I am out shooting or even just walking around out in the boonies,I seem to have a habit of pacing distances off for some reason.One thing that always surprises me is how often it is very easy to either overestimate or underestimate the distance from one spot to another one.One thing I know for sure,a distance of say 500 yards,is farther out than most people realise,especially when it comes to shooting.
You are correct sir, I have gotten into the habit of calling the sections where I hunt quarter sections when they are actually 80 acres. My point is that I am often presented 400 plus yard shots, I will only take these under excellent conditions however. But at least I have that option.IF you use that distance you will screw yourself eventually, as I did many years ago. Lost a huge buck with my "knowing" a 1/4 was 440 yards, up until I under shot him significantly and then laser ranged the distance.
A 1/4 normal square shaped section is 1 HALF a mile by 1 HALF a mile square or 880 yards from fence line to fence line.
OP Either caliber will easily kill anything on this continent at much further than 300 yards, the 7 Rem Mag may have a slight advantage at long range, but bullet placement is the biggest factor.
So, does a 7mm or 30-06 make a quarter section shorter?![]()
Both calibers will shoot 1000yds. If you know the exact distance and know the trajectory of your bullet both calibers are capable of making the shot. If you are guesstimating then there is no guarantees with either caliber.
The easiest & most honest way is to look at ballistics charts. Or check each with a chronograph. My chronographed reloads were as follows. 3006 with 180 grain partition 2740 fps. 7mm mag with 175 grain partition could barely do 2800 fps. The 06 had a 22 inch barrel & the 7mm had a 24 inch barrel. If you factor in the barrel length difference and corrected each for identical weight you would find very little difference. What people think is one thing, facts are another. Do yourself a favour and read the charts. I realize there are differences in every gun but my conclusion was it was senseless to have both. They are both excellent calibers. As others have said, fit is more important. I would never underestimate a 3006 & I would not hesitate to own either.
The easiest & most honest way is to look at ballistics charts. Or check each with a chronograph. My chronographed reloads were as follows. 3006 with 180 grain partition 2740 fps. 7mm mag with 175 grain partition could barely do 2800 fps. The 06 had a 22 inch barrel & the 7mm had a 24 inch barrel. If you factor in the barrel length difference and corrected each for identical weight you would find very little difference. What people think is one thing, facts are another. Do yourself a favour and read the charts. I realize there are differences in every gun but my conclusion was it was senseless to have both. They are both excellent calibers. As others have said, fit is more important. I would never underestimate a 3006 & I would not hesitate to own either.




























