I have owned 3 300WSMs, and to be honest, the reason why is that I went all in when I purchased my first one by buying "competition" level reloading equipment when I bought my first one. The first was a Remington 700 XCR - while it shot average (1.25"-1.5" groups), ; The second was a Remington 700 XCR RMEF. This rifle shot beautifully when I found my pet load for it (i.e., 180 g TTSX over 62.5 g of H4350 in WIN cases, ave vel.=2950 fps). I settled on this load after it shot three consecutive, 4-shoot groups under an inch during load development. This was a consistently sub-MOA file.
The PROBLEMS:
- The 1st REM700 XCR had a poorly cut chamber - it would leave what looked like a rifling-mark on my brass (an spiral-like tool mark in the chamber???) and feeding ramp was rough and would leave chatter marks on the bullets
- The 2nd REM700 was essentially problem-free. My only gripe, and one that also afflicted the 1st WSM, was that REM700 would only feed reliably with two rounds in the magazine. I made a mistake in selling this gun
- The 3rd 300WSM was supposed to be my dream gun - a Sako M85 Finnlight. While this gun was acceptable in the accuracy department (accuracy load, 168 TTSX over 58.0 g RL 15, ave. group size 0.95", range of 0.75-1.25" - i.e., not consistently Sub-MOA), it suffers from the notorious Sako M85 ejection issues - i.e., ejected rounds would hit the windage knob of the scope and fall back into the feed) - I am forced to mount my scopes with a 90 degree rotation - a pain when I love using Leupold CDS-ZL scopes.
If I had to choose between the two now, I would go with the 300 WM - will feed rounds reliably; easier to find factory-ammo for; supposedly easier to develop accurate loads for. However, if I were to choose today, I would choose the .300 PRC - mostly because I like shooting targets at long range for fun.
N.B., Where I hunt (North Eastern Ontario), all the moose I shot with my WSM (four) could have easily been taken with the .308 as well - all were broadsides (I waited for this presentation) and all were taken within a 100 M. However, I prefer the WSM (or WM, if I had that) as I will have the horsepower for longer shots and/or shots from less than ideal angles.