Bambistew
Well-known member
I've often pondered people proclaiming one caliber/cartridge is better than another because you can switch between bullet weights, or somehow a particular caliber has a ‘huge’ range to chose from. This is especially true of the guys who are infatuated with the 30-06 and or 30 cals in general. I own one 30 cal, (30-06) hunted with it a few years and put it back in the closet and haven’t touched it since. That was nearly 15 years ago…I much prefer the 06 case in every caliber around it, especially the 338. Of the 15 different cartridges I currently own and in the past, I can only think of ONE that I switched bullet weights. That was a 243, which I used to shoot p-dogs, gophers, coyotes and deer/lope. I'd load up 55gr BT's and 85gr Sierra's. Towards the end of its barrel life and once I wised up, I shoot 87gr V-max exclusively for everything. I swapped out barrels for a 260rem and now shoot 120gr BT in it for everything.
I personally can't find a reason to switch between bullet weights to match to the game you're hunting. For the 30 cal club there seems to be the theory that going with a 150 for antelope, 165gr bullet for deer and then moving up to a 180-200 for elk/moose is how it should be done. Is a 180gr overkill for a deer/lope? Maybe shooting 130’s for varmints and 180’s for elk? Heck might as well get used to lobbing those 180’s and be prepared for elk season.
For me I chose a bullet weight I feel matches the case capacity and sticking to it allows me to get familiar the rifles performance, both close and long range. I couldn't imagine switching up weights on a regular basis and having the same confidence in the field.
Some cases don’t hold quite enough powder to make some weights of bullets practical, but they usually work fine if you are familiar with the rifles performance. A .308 Win comes to mind. 180’s are not ideal but knowing how they perform and knowing your rifle intimately will put an elk in the ground as far as I have the capability to shoot.
I’m not one to promote magnum cartridges, I think they have their place, but for me I find no reason to own a big supper sonic boomer for anything or anywhere I hunt. Heck I think I only own one rifle that will break 3000fps, and it just barely makes it there.
Should I sell all my rifles and bust out the 30-06 and just swap around bullet weights? I think I would rather quit hunting than be forced to hunt with a 30-06.
I personally can't find a reason to switch between bullet weights to match to the game you're hunting. For the 30 cal club there seems to be the theory that going with a 150 for antelope, 165gr bullet for deer and then moving up to a 180-200 for elk/moose is how it should be done. Is a 180gr overkill for a deer/lope? Maybe shooting 130’s for varmints and 180’s for elk? Heck might as well get used to lobbing those 180’s and be prepared for elk season.
For me I chose a bullet weight I feel matches the case capacity and sticking to it allows me to get familiar the rifles performance, both close and long range. I couldn't imagine switching up weights on a regular basis and having the same confidence in the field.
Some cases don’t hold quite enough powder to make some weights of bullets practical, but they usually work fine if you are familiar with the rifles performance. A .308 Win comes to mind. 180’s are not ideal but knowing how they perform and knowing your rifle intimately will put an elk in the ground as far as I have the capability to shoot.
I’m not one to promote magnum cartridges, I think they have their place, but for me I find no reason to own a big supper sonic boomer for anything or anywhere I hunt. Heck I think I only own one rifle that will break 3000fps, and it just barely makes it there.
Should I sell all my rifles and bust out the 30-06 and just swap around bullet weights? I think I would rather quit hunting than be forced to hunt with a 30-06.