Creedmoor shooter
Well-Known Member
The new Lapua brass will solve that. It goes for ever!
As soon as I burn up my supply of large rifle primers I plan on it
The new Lapua brass will solve that. It goes for ever!
And the 6.5 Creedmoor will always wish it could be the .260 AI... The .260 Ackley is still the king of the short-action (.473") 6.5 cartridges. Pushes the 140 Hybrids over 3K with a 26" barrel.
Also, if Remington's release timing of the .260 Rem (1997) hadn't been so crappy, it would have dominated and the Creedmoor (2007) probably never would have come about. But despite Remington's timing blunder, they stopped supporting it and it almost completely died-off. So, that was 2 huge hits against the .260 Rem.
Remington almost killed-off the cartridge that started this whole recent 6.5 short-action trend here in the states. I know there were folks shooting the x47L long before that, but it was not a trendy cartridge, other than in certain niche' areas, like amongst BR and varmint shooters.
As much as I love my 700 actions...I definitely have had my fair-share of complaints about stupid bonehead crap that Remington has pulled over the years.
We'll technically the creed doesn't wish it was a 260 AI because that's even less popular that the 260!
Who cares about popularity... It's all about the ballistics. And in that aspect, the .260 AI is still tippy-top dog.
That is true. Can't deny that. Sometimes I wish I did do the 260 AI then other times I'm perfectly happy with what I chose.
No offense meant, and I don't hate the Creedmoor, I just hate bandwagons (when it comes to anything). I'm not one of those dress-this-way to look cool or do this or that, or buy this or that because it's cool... I'm the guy laughing at the people who do that because they're so jaded by their attempt at acceptance, that they can't see just how ridiculous they actually look.
That being said, the Creedmoor has most definitely become the hipster trend of the cartridge world, because it is a bandwagon cartridge. It came out, and EVERYBODY and their brother thought it was just the most revolutionary and amazing thing of all time, and nobody has ever made anything like it before, it could shoot a moose at 2,000 yards, and stop a blue whale in mid-swim, while shooting the eyes out of a flea on a dog's back at 1000 yards, and blah blah blah... I've heard it all standing in gun stores listening to newbs talk about guns. It can get entertaining, and sometimes extremely difficult to keep from laughing.
Im wondering what will become of the 26 Nosler. Talk about fast!!
I just purchased my second 6.5 Creedmoor.
But I have several other cartridges.
They all kinda do what the Creed does, but it does it with less powder, wide node and less recoil.
I can load 3-4 Creedmoor cases to one of my 338 Lapua cases. I will always have a Creedmoor in my safe. No one can deny the case design and efficiency of it.
I agree it brought a lot of fan boys, but there are supporters for everything. It brought a lot of attention to the long range game because of the rifles and ammo that's available for it. There is not to many cartridges out there that you can go to Walmart and buy factory ammo, take it out and dial 8mils of elevation and hit 1000 yard plates. All for about 25$...
All that said, I have several rifles but I guess I could be called a 30-06 supporter, because that's my favorite..
Fair points, but I honestly don't believe the Creedmoor is a long range hunting cartridge. 500 yards maybe...I agree, but it did just kind of reinvent the wheel... I mean, the .260 Rem had been out 10 years prior to the Creedmoor, but like I stated, Remington screwed the pooch, and the Creedmoor took over where the .260 Rem SHOULD have already been dominating.
I agree it did bring a lot of people to the LR market, but you also gotta remember just how bad of a shot your average hunter is...Most of them can't even properly place a bullet in an animal at 150 yards. Do you really feel comfortable with those folks trying to shoot LR at game? I don't... That's how you end up with a lot of injured and maimed animals.
That being said, if Cleetus and JoeBob decided to practice and actually learn what to do, that's different, but how many of those folks do you think actually do that? I'd put that number probably in the 5-10% range, if I had to guess.
That's also why I don't hunt public land...Too many bad shooters with guns out there for me to be comfortable.