The problem remains that many of todays cartridges are much like pop music. They have appeal but without some time in the field noone knows if they will be here in 5 years. The only thing shorter than some short magnums was their shelf life. There are many short run failures out there from recent history. The future state of the shooting supply industry is another concern. The cartridges that count are the ones on the shelf and that favors 30-30 over many on this list!
One trend is the purchase of rifles for narrower roles, ie., gophers, coyotes, deer, moose bear, african hammer, etc..
Me personally, I prefer 100 year old cartridges with rims in unusual sizes, 303, 32-20, 32 Special, 22 Hornet, 22LR, and my new ones are 444 and 223 Rem. Not everyone shoots or cares for magnums, bolts, scopes, and plastic rifles. However most do for very sensible reasons.
I would stick to 22, 6MM, 30, and 338 for component supply, specially bullets. Best choice for bullets and anything bigger than a 338 Magnum is overkill and probably redundant in 10 years when moose tickets are scarcer than grizzly tickets!
One trend is the purchase of rifles for narrower roles, ie., gophers, coyotes, deer, moose bear, african hammer, etc..
Me personally, I prefer 100 year old cartridges with rims in unusual sizes, 303, 32-20, 32 Special, 22 Hornet, 22LR, and my new ones are 444 and 223 Rem. Not everyone shoots or cares for magnums, bolts, scopes, and plastic rifles. However most do for very sensible reasons.
I would stick to 22, 6MM, 30, and 338 for component supply, specially bullets. Best choice for bullets and anything bigger than a 338 Magnum is overkill and probably redundant in 10 years when moose tickets are scarcer than grizzly tickets!
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