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Rifles, Reloading, Optics, Equipment
Rifles, Bullets, Barrels & Ballistics
Need Caliber Selection Opinions
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<blockquote data-quote="Dave King" data-source="post: 21970" data-attributes="member: 3"><p>Jim</p><p> </p><p> Welcome to the Long Range Hunting forums.</p><p></p><p></p><p> Your question about a flat shooter leads me down the path of explaining the different methods and lines of thinking for some Long Range Hunters.</p><p></p><p> I do this because it'll help you understand my reasoning for cartridge and bullet selection.</p><p></p><p> The are the Point Blank folks, the Hold Over folks, the Adjust The Scope folks and also the Custom Reticle folks (not an all inclusive list).</p><p></p><p> Basically there are two groups, those that shoot to max distance of the prezeroed rifle and those that adjust the scope (either through cranking the knobs or through reticle marks) for the critters distance.</p><p></p><p> Until you get to the Ultra Long Range folks there is a fairly (not always true) easy method to determine what group the shooter belongs in. Fast Flat cartridges more often equate to Point Blank and Hold Over folks, chunky slower easy on the barrel cartridges more often equate to Adjust The Scope shooters.</p><p></p><p> The 257 Weatherby is a fine cartridge, there are several wildcats that are in that league. .257 caliber is not known for being selected as an accurate Match Type cartridge.</p><p></p><p> 7MM has a good selection of bullets and the 7MM RUM should be a VERY flat shooter with the correct bullet(s).</p><p></p><p> If it were me and I HAD to select between these two cartridges, it'd be the 7MM RUM hands down.</p><p></p><p> I like to shoot, I like to shoot a lot, and these two would not do well for me as I'm afraid I'd shoot the barrel out in just a year or two.</p><p></p><p> Depending on the distance you plan to shoot while on these hunts in Northern MO, I'd try the 30-06 and shoot the heavier bullets with high BCs. Put a scope on the rifle that will allow you to adjust the elevation and you'd be set to 500, 600, or 700 yards.</p><p></p><p> With the 7MM RUM initially setup for long range (adjust the scope method) you could be looking at a 1000 yard rifle.</p><p></p><p> If you opt for the Point Blank or Hold Over method the 7MM RUM will probably make it to 450 yards on a good warm day at higher elevations.</p><p></p><p> </p><p></p><p> What method of Long Range hunting do you have in mind??</p><p></p><p> /r</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Dave King, post: 21970, member: 3"] Jim Welcome to the Long Range Hunting forums. Your question about a flat shooter leads me down the path of explaining the different methods and lines of thinking for some Long Range Hunters. I do this because it'll help you understand my reasoning for cartridge and bullet selection. The are the Point Blank folks, the Hold Over folks, the Adjust The Scope folks and also the Custom Reticle folks (not an all inclusive list). Basically there are two groups, those that shoot to max distance of the prezeroed rifle and those that adjust the scope (either through cranking the knobs or through reticle marks) for the critters distance. Until you get to the Ultra Long Range folks there is a fairly (not always true) easy method to determine what group the shooter belongs in. Fast Flat cartridges more often equate to Point Blank and Hold Over folks, chunky slower easy on the barrel cartridges more often equate to Adjust The Scope shooters. The 257 Weatherby is a fine cartridge, there are several wildcats that are in that league. .257 caliber is not known for being selected as an accurate Match Type cartridge. 7MM has a good selection of bullets and the 7MM RUM should be a VERY flat shooter with the correct bullet(s). If it were me and I HAD to select between these two cartridges, it'd be the 7MM RUM hands down. I like to shoot, I like to shoot a lot, and these two would not do well for me as I'm afraid I'd shoot the barrel out in just a year or two. Depending on the distance you plan to shoot while on these hunts in Northern MO, I'd try the 30-06 and shoot the heavier bullets with high BCs. Put a scope on the rifle that will allow you to adjust the elevation and you'd be set to 500, 600, or 700 yards. With the 7MM RUM initially setup for long range (adjust the scope method) you could be looking at a 1000 yard rifle. If you opt for the Point Blank or Hold Over method the 7MM RUM will probably make it to 450 yards on a good warm day at higher elevations. What method of Long Range hunting do you have in mind?? /r [/QUOTE]
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