There were compromises made in the designs of both the WSM and the 300 Win mag in order to fit them into magazines which were shrter than the cartridges really needed. The standard throating dimension for both cartridges necessitates deep seating of heavy bullets, mag length notwithstanding.
The feeding issues which exist with some WSM rifles are the result of the factories trying to take the cheap way to get them to function. The magazines should have been made wider to accomodate the fat cartridges at the proper stack angle. Remington did the same thing with their Ultra Mags and many of them have feeding problems as well.
Not long ago, a friend of mine mentioned that he saw no need for anything larger then the 30/06 case if the caliber was under 338. I tend to agree with him.
I am not a fan of the WSM's but they have been well received by shooters and hunters who lack my maturity so I suspect they'll be around for a while. I continue to avoid owning one. Regards, Bill.
The feeding issues which exist with some WSM rifles are the result of the factories trying to take the cheap way to get them to function. The magazines should have been made wider to accomodate the fat cartridges at the proper stack angle. Remington did the same thing with their Ultra Mags and many of them have feeding problems as well.
Not long ago, a friend of mine mentioned that he saw no need for anything larger then the 30/06 case if the caliber was under 338. I tend to agree with him.
I am not a fan of the WSM's but they have been well received by shooters and hunters who lack my maturity so I suspect they'll be around for a while. I continue to avoid owning one. Regards, Bill.























































