What would be wrong with a properly twisted super-accurate 308 Win?
Ted
I'd go .243AI, .260AI, both with 8" twist, or 7WSM with 8.5" twist.
Ahhhhh! So many good options ! Some one come up with a super caliber already![]()
At the risk of sounding like I'm beating the snot out of the .243 thing (I promise this is the last time), have a look at this article - http://www.accurateshooter.com/guns-of-week/gunweek0102/
I wasn't aware of this until just recently but to me, at least, it sounds very interesting. When I shoot my stock .243 out, I think I may go this way. That is, of course, until some other shiny thing comes along, I'm sure... When it comes to cartridge choices, I feel like I have the attention span of a squirrel.
Rooster
Barrel life, I don't dispute. What sort of round count would one see with an XC or BR? Would they do well with the 105's, 107's, 115's, etc. that the OP would likely use for stretching things out like he wants? Having no experience with these cartridges whatsoever, do they honestly "blow the .243 out of the water" with regard to everything else you mentioned, minus the barrel life? Good god, no wonder it took me a decade to pick a caliber!
...
I wasn't aware of this until just recently but to me, at least, it sounds very interesting. When I shoot my stock .243 out, I think I may go this way. That is, of course, until some other shiny thing comes along, I'm sure... When it comes to cartridge choices, I feel like I have the attention span of a squirrel.
Rooster
Many look at this choice the wrong way. The key is bullet NOT cartridge. Pick the bullet you want to use (assuming this is a quality bullet appropriate to the task) and the operating speeds you want, THEN choose the case that will let you achieve this given the rifle specs.
I have launched the 22cal 80gr amax to a mile. I have no issues hitting 1500yds with the 22cal 90gr bullets (going further is such a pain with scope elevation). how far do you want to go?
the 6mm will get to a mile easily from a 6BR. Anything just reduces flight time and get big enough, lowers accuracy.
The race to big bore is driven mostly by the need to put a hurt on something way out there. If you are just plinking or shooting for S&G's, there are so many small options that work very well.
Start with the shooting goal and work backwards. Most everything "new" is a rehash of stuff from the 60's and 70's. Some really novel ideas have roots in the 30's.
There really isn't much new in chambering BUT bullet tech is moving ahead leaps and bounds.
Jerry