- Location
- Saskatchewan
This is incorrect. The most expensive component of our ammunition is the brass case followed by the bullet. Since the same bullet can be used on any .30 caliber cartridge, the cost there is equal, and the price difference between commercial the offerings of .308, .30/06, and .300 Winchester brass is fairly minor. The largest difference in the loads is the powder charge, which ranges between 45 and 80 grs, when we load for a 180 gr bullet yet the cost of powder doesn't compare to the cost of the bullet or the brass case.
As an example it costs about $55 for 100 180 gr Nosler ABs, or about .55 ea.
.308 brass cartridge cases cost $46/50 or .92 ea
.300 Winchester cartridge cases cost $78/50 or $1.56 ea
100 LR primers cost $6/100 or .06 ea
powder prices average $40/lb so cost $40/155 rds of .308 or .28 ea.
and $40/87 rounds of .300 or .46/ea
Total cost per round of .308 is $1.81
Total cost per round of .300 Winchester is $2.63 so the difference is closer to 45% than it is 100%.
Whether or not the difference in performance can be appreciated by an individual depends upon the individual, and the prowess you bestow upon the .308 can also be said of the .30/30, which has also taken moose, grizzlies and bison. The terminal performance of the .300 is greater, but the hunter must be able to shoot competently in order to exploit the advantage. Sometimes though a 6 pound .308 carbine is nicer to carry than an 8 pound .300, and that is where the .308 really shines, not in the fact that it burns less powder.
I was thinking of factory ammo off the top of my head at the time of posting and recalling Weatherby ammo specifically. Cartridges like the 308, 7mm-08, 6.5 CM and the likes shine because of the relation of velocity and energy attained with the amount powder used compared to other cartridges and, in the context of this the thread the low recoil particularly.