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Long Range Hunting & Shooting
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<blockquote data-quote="WildRose" data-source="post: 1547116" data-attributes="member: 30902"><p>The .300wm is never the wrong answer. I have the NWP muzzle brakes on a dozen of my rifles and love it.</p><p></p><p><a href="https://www.macsgunworks.com/muzzle-brakes" target="_blank">https://www.macsgunworks.com/muzzle-brakes</a></p><p></p><p>The slotted version is the one you want.</p><p></p><p>With elk as your primary goal the 300wm is a great choice but if you're going to do a lot of high volume shooting for practice something like the 6.5CM or .260 Remington is going to pay for itself pretty quickly.</p><p></p><p>Even with a good MB you are likely to get fatigued from the recoil and blast of the .300wm where the 6.5's like the .260 and 6.5CM are extremely "user friendly" and you'll both spend more time at the range practicing and enjoy it more with them.</p><p></p><p>Surprisingly your ballistics are very similar with both of them and the .300wm as well at least out to a thousand yards so you will be getting very beneficial practice all the way around with them.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="WildRose, post: 1547116, member: 30902"] The .300wm is never the wrong answer. I have the NWP muzzle brakes on a dozen of my rifles and love it. [URL]https://www.macsgunworks.com/muzzle-brakes[/URL] The slotted version is the one you want. With elk as your primary goal the 300wm is a great choice but if you're going to do a lot of high volume shooting for practice something like the 6.5CM or .260 Remington is going to pay for itself pretty quickly. Even with a good MB you are likely to get fatigued from the recoil and blast of the .300wm where the 6.5's like the .260 and 6.5CM are extremely "user friendly" and you'll both spend more time at the range practicing and enjoy it more with them. Surprisingly your ballistics are very similar with both of them and the .300wm as well at least out to a thousand yards so you will be getting very beneficial practice all the way around with them. [/QUOTE]
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