What does the BC or the velocity, in this case,have to do with accuracy?Either cartridge is going at supersonic speed and the BC of the 7mm is not that big of a difference compared to .30cals.The only thing that would turn the table at long range would be the shooter behind the gun,me thinks.todbartell said:everything being equal, my bet would be on a 30-06
of the rifles Ive owned, the 30-06 has shot better for me, and thats a Sendero SF 7mm Mag vs a Titanium 30-06!
at longer range, 500+ yards, I think the higher BC & velocity of the 7mm bullets would turn the table
BCWILL said:But WHO really can shoot well enough to Notice a Diff in MOST Hunting rigs ?
Just headspace the 7mm Rem on the shoulder as well.If you shoot for accuracy,then that's the way to do it.BCWILL said:30-06 Headspaces on the Shoulder......
7mm Magnum on the Belt![]()
Yes I know............varminter said:Just headspace the 7mm Rem on the shoulder as well.If you shoot for accuracy,then that's the way to do it.![]()
How so?todbartell said:compare wind drift in a 10 mph crosswind at 1/4 mile between a 7mm 160 gr Accubonds @ 3000 fps vs 30 cal 165 gr Accubond @ 2800 fps
Id guess the 7mm would show enough of an advantage that if all things are equal (shooter, rifle quality, load quality etc), that the 7mm would be more accurate, as there would be less variation from shot to shot in the varying winds
It has more to do to with, how good you can estimate the varying winddrifts than the accuracy potential of your gun or cartridge.todbartell said:what the wind is doing at the shooters position, its speed at the target, and the speed halfway, arent always the same thing! the less the bullet is effected by the wind, the more accurate it will be at longer ranges. between the 7mm Mag & 30-06, the 7mm Mag has a higher downrange accuracy potential




























