Wow what a sweet little rifle! Is that a custom rifle or re-barreled to 358?
Its a Dumoulin factory made rifle from the 60's, all original, with matching numbers on all parts. Its not a custom and not re-barreled.
Wow what a sweet little rifle! Is that a custom rifle or re-barreled to 358?
Its a Dumoulin factory made rifle from the 60's, all original, with matching numbers on all parts. Its not a custom and not re-barreled.
I have shot deer, moose and coyotes with my 1971 Rem 700 35 Whelan. I have never had to fire a second shot. The last moose was a 600 lb bull standing head-on at about 150 yds with his head down. A 200 gr Rem factory pill delivered between his ears into the hump dropped him in his tracks. I also have a Rem 673 in 350 Rem Mag; the most efficient of the magnum cartridges. Substantially less recoil than the Rem 600. Deadly accurate as well with 200 gr handloads. 7mm and .358 are my two favorite calibers. I bought a new Rem 600 back in the late 70s from SIR. Brutal beast to shoot. I fired three rounds at the range and sold it.
"350 Rem Mag; the most efficient of the magnum cartridges. "
Don't know much about the .350 Rem Mag. Would you mind elaborating on this comment ?
...The point is, I know that when a 225gr, .358 cal slug hits an animal at 2600-2700fps (in the right spot, lol) the animal is not moving far. BTW, I think the 35 Whelen AI is totally unnecessary as the total powder charge increase is negligable. For more on the AI cartidges pick up this months copy of Handloader Mag.... real interesting read...
And when a 270 gr from a 9.3X62 hits at the same velocity they don't move far either.
Both are very fine big game cartridges!
Ted
Makes sense, the 9.3X62 is just a Whelen with love handles...
The 350 rem mag is a short fat 35 Whelen with a shorter barrel advantage