A Little Rifle Help, Please (Purchased Gun w/ PICS!!! Pg 12)

nautical_bouy,
my bad on the .308/30-06 parent case. i form most of my .308 cases from 30-06 brass so i was not thinking about true lineage. sometimes i forget just because you can reform one case into another they are not necessarily related. in fact all of my .308's, .270's, 22-250's are head stamped 30-06. i like forming down cases so that i can turn the necks to the exact outside and inside dimensions i want.

my reason for using a 7mm is the combination of wide selection of bullet choices and being able to keep a high sectional density when using the lighter bullets. in 7mm a 140 grain bullet and a 160 grain bullet keep almost an identical sectional density. even the little 120 grain ballistic tip has a sectional density of .213 and a ballistic coefficient of .417. compare that to a .30 at the same weight with a s.d. of .166 and a b.c. of .300. so for specific tasks the 7mm fills quite a niche for me.

as i stated in my last post, what just one person observes in the field is not enough empirical evidence to warrant any kind of overall judgment on a particular caliber. while it may sway us personally it does not affect the overall effectiveness of that particular cartridge. the bottom line is proper bullet placement is critical no matter what the caliber and sometimes the will of the particular animal plays into the picture.

but if we want to quote ballistic charts then there is nothing the the .270 will do that the 30-06 won't do. couple that with the increased bullet selection available for .30 calibers then the numbers swing us to the venerable oughtsix as the king in this class of calibers. the funny thing is that knowing this, i only own one -06 and it very seldom gets used.

i realize the very argument i just used for the oughtsix/.308 over the .270 also applies when comparing the 300 win mag to the 7mm mag. it doesn't change my "warm fuzzy feeling" for the 7mm. just like my .30 caliber won't sway your love of the .270. this is the great thing about ballistics. folks like us can sit and split hairs about minuscule differences in performance for entire lifetimes. if it wasn't rifles we would be arguing about dodge vs. chevy vs. ford. which is better? the 360 mopar, the 351 ford or the 350 chevy? i am sure we all have our own personal opinions and assume our opinions are correct.

to address some of the other ideas in your post. i understand the drawbacks and advantages of free bore in weatherby's. a weatherby is a specific tool for a specific purpose. it is not a match rifle in my opinion. but if you want to get a .30 caliber bullet running close to 4,000 fps then it will do it. since e=mc2 then an increase of velocity is the easiest way to get more energy out of the equation. i have seen .257 weatherby loads that were still going over 4,000 fps at 100 yards. that is hard to do without free bore. throat erosion is not a factor to me. when the throats look bad on one of my rifles we unthread the barrel, cut a little length off the back and recut the chamber. if this trick is not feasible then we just put on a new barrel and start the process all over again. same as blowing up a motor in my hotrods. just gives me an excuse to try and do it better the next try...

now to get back on topic. i would suggest the .270 over the .243 myself. on that we are in complete agreement. i have never really liked the .243 except as a transitional caliber for medium sized kids who are not quite physically large enough for a real rifle. but then i would split a hair and suggest the 25-06 or the 30-06 over the .270. and so on and on it goes until were taking pot shots at possums with our turnbolt .50 bmg's. where are you at? someday we may need to get together and bust some caps.
michael

p.s. some day we are going to have to find a place to debate the nuances of bigger rifles. .338's, .350's and .375's really spark me up. it will be a stretch to tie this class of rifles into a chicken forum unless somebody has a grizzly bear eating their fowl.
 
nautical_bouy,
just noticed your in pennsylvania. we are close enough that some day our paths will cross and i'll buy you a cup of coffee.
michael

p.s. i bet my chicken can outrun your chicken... ;-)
 
Mike, I understand your point, and we will have to cross paths, I might let you shoot my .458 Lott,,,lol

One thing about a 270 many don't know is there are avalible 11 diffrent bullets weights offered from 90 to 180 grains, so you have many choices of SD's and BC's, none of what I have found that mattered. The Federal premium load is allmost identical to what 3 generations of family and friends have use in a hand load, before factory loads were any good,,57 grains of 4831 behind a 130 Sierra BTSP, it's like hitting a deer with a truck, sd's and bc's don't equal real world preformance, the elk and bear I have killed I used a partition in 130 grain, the Sierra is a bit fragile for bigger than deer.

All I can do is share what I have seen my self and buddys do,, most tracking skills were learned from bad shots and people who insist on shooting a heavy for the game bullet, the good placements that ran allways seem to be the100, 243, 150, 270,, 180 30-06, and 160-170 7mm's,,, thats a lot of deer considering for the last 20 years we average close to four deer each a year.

Much boils down to personal choice and performance, everything in the world has been taken with a spear, and the most succesful market hunter, S.H. Bell, killed most of his elephants with a 7x57 Mauser.

If nothing else it makes me proud of our country that we have so many choice and we can discuss this topics, and most calibers are from the good old USA, except of course Mikes 7mm's
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nautical_bouy,
i'll take a pass on the .458 lott. i purchased a .458 win mag at a deal some 20 years ago. it came with a box of ammo that was missing three rounds. i shot one round and put it back in the box. first opportunity i had to sell it the rifle moved on to its fourth owner. apparently one of the two previous owners before i got it either fired it twice or one of his buddies launched a round, three owners and four rounds fired... since i m not a safari hunter i don't need to launch rounds from such a beast. i do have a .50bmg on the wish list after i buy my next ham radio and a new dslr camera body. but with proper muzzle brakes and a much too heavy to tote overall weight this caliber is manageable.
michael

p.s. you didn't bite on the chicken racing idea ;-)
 
I vote for a .243, should drop the raccoon but not explode it and works well for deer, if you shoot them right
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I use my MIL's when we go to PA for deer season. My husband and I have a deal that whoever gets the clean kill doesn't have to do the gutting. I haven't gutted once
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OK, I do help hold the legs and stuff, but I don't have to get down and dirty. (FYI he uses a 30-06)

I hate hunting with his friends, its all "look movement, Bang! Dang, I missed" or off following a wounded deer. If you would just wait for a decent shot we wouldn't scare everything off for the day or end up trudging up and down ridges
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And they all use the bigger calibers also. We've started processing our own deer just so we are sure we get our clean, adrenaline free meat back and not someone elses run to kingdom come meat.

Most PA deer I know about (Armstrong Cty) aren't monsters so the .243 works well, again with well placed shots.

New Question:
Any ideas for a pistol caliber rifle good for a female shooter? We moved to IN and we need new deer rifles. Mostly I would like something that comes with a shorter stock standard so I don't need to spend extra on a gunsmith.
 
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Well, there aren't many - which can be seen two ways:

1. Choices are narrowed, saving you trouble.
2. Choices are slim.

I'm for number one. There are rifles to be had readily in .44 MAG and .357 Mag, and not so readily in .41 Mag. The best are made by Marlin, and there are imports, too.
While each has it adherents, most people opt for the .44 Mag. If I were to use such a rifle for deer hunting, I would too and keep shots inside 100 yds.
 
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The other American made option is Henry Repeating Arms, although more expensive than Marlin.

On the import side, Uberti and Chapparal and I'm sure others.

All of these are lever actions, I'm not aware of any bolt actions in pistol calibers.
 
Ruger's m77 is a bolt action that was offered in .44 mag they also had a .44 mag autoloader called m99/44. I checked ruger's website and i don't think they are offered now. There are also alot of good winchester lever guns still floating around out there. You could also look into single shot rifles in pistol calibers. new england firearms has both .357 and .44.
 
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I mentioned the Marlin lever guns and the various imports because last I checked, they were the most "ubiquitous" of the bunch. Availability is an important factor, already mentioned by our OP'er as important.

For example, one of my favorite calibers, the 6.5MM X 55 Swedish round, as good as it is, is found chambered in only a few rifles. None of these are current catalog items, either. On top of that, ammo is near non existent off the shelf at the local WalMart. I wish it were different, but it isn't.

Often, some good guns can be found on the used gun shelf and I always recommend you look there first. It IS worth keeping feelers out for one of the Ruger 44 autoloaders... if you find one, buy it.

But in general, if you fancy a revlolver round in a rifle for hunting, a Marlin 1894 lever gun is a great thing in .44 Mag or .357 Mag and is probably your best bet (I personally like the .41 Mag in a rifle and wish it had done more in life. Alas, they don't make a lot of them, they cost more to purchase and ammo is iffy).

The Marlins are side ejecting solid tops that mount a scope with common ease. They are rugged and can take whatever you dish out.

I have two.
 
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