The 35 family of cartridges is one I have been reading up on recently and they definitely have my interest. They seem to have a lot to offer as a balance of power, trajectory and recoil as well as ease of hand loading. Take the 35 Whelen, it is a necked up 30-06 and handles 180-250 grain bullets at velocities that offer enough power and a flat enough trajectory for any game in North America for anybody that wants more power than the 30 calibers, yet the Whelen is barely hanging on for life as a factory chambering. It has the pedigree, age and on paper ballistics that should make it a winner, yet it's always been a niche cartridge. Just looking at it on paper you might expect it to be one of the most popular over 30 cartridges in Canada, Alaska and anywhere game bigger than deer is on the menu... so what gives?
Same could be said for the 358 winchester. In light compact short action ed bolts, pumps and levers it is like the little brother to the Whelen like the 308 is to the 30-06 and should have been more popular than it is.
Even here on CGN, it seems like either 338's or the 9.3/375 get more attention. The 35's have been around as long or longer and seem to have a lot to offer I'm wondering why they seem to be the 'red-headed stepchild' of the shooting community and get so little respect?
It seems like when a barrel is bored to .358 caliber it's like the kiss of death for a gun or cartridge...
Same could be said for the 358 winchester. In light compact short action ed bolts, pumps and levers it is like the little brother to the Whelen like the 308 is to the 30-06 and should have been more popular than it is.
Even here on CGN, it seems like either 338's or the 9.3/375 get more attention. The 35's have been around as long or longer and seem to have a lot to offer I'm wondering why they seem to be the 'red-headed stepchild' of the shooting community and get so little respect?
It seems like when a barrel is bored to .358 caliber it's like the kiss of death for a gun or cartridge...