Chevy_52
Member
The 338 lapua will outperform both, bucks the wind way better and has been around for 40 years … no debate here IMHO
I have experience with both at those distances.If you had to pick one for hunting out to 1000yards on whitetail and targets out to a mile what one would you choose?
ThisI would expect much better support for the PRC as far as factory ammo and aftermarket brass than you'll get with the Nosler in decades to come.
O yes you do.You need one that you can practice "A lot" to shoot deer at a 1000 yards!!! 7 Saum is plenty of gun. Don't need a 30 cal to shoot deer !!
That and a 5-10% reduction in powder usage add up over time. Rum brass is very hard to come by at times and certainly far more expensive as well.What is the PRC going to do that your RUM won't? Or maybe the question is what might the PRC do better than the RUM?
I have a 28 and a 300RUM, I don't use anything lighter than 180 in the 28 or 212 in the RUM, on steel there isn't enough difference to discuss in my opinion. For deer I would probably take the 28 but I would also investigate something in the 140-168 grain range too. My son shoots his 28 to 1000 on steel or rocks with ease using 162 ELD-X a bit over 3300 and I suspect the bullet would perform well on deer at that distance too. His 162 load is significantly flatter than my 195's in the 28 or anything in my RUM at 1000 by quite a bit and unless the wind is gusting he doesn't have any real disadvantage running the lighter bullet. The throat erosion is significant, that is really the only downside I see.
Man been thinking you should just do a 30-28 nosler. 28N is gonna get ya 3100+ max out of 195's, 300 prc is gonna get ya the same. The 30-28 nosler is just gonna be at 300 Norma mag levels. But if ya think about it 50 fps ain't gonna mack that much difference I promise. And a elk really isn't gonna tell the difference lol.If you had to pick one for hunting out to 1000yards on whitetail and targets out to a mile what one would you choose?
I suppose, I buy a couple hundred pieces of brass for any new cartridge when I buy/build the rifle so I don't think about it that way. Sometimes I buy the brass and then the rifle. A couple hundred pieces of good RUM brass will last many barrels too. My 28 and RUM brass were nearly the same cost, but I bought Gunwerks for both. I don't use Hornady brass in anything but 6.5cm, and only there because I bought several hundred before I realized how poor it is compared to ADG or Gunwerks or Peterson etc. Nosler brass is in the same category as Hornady for me as well, I don't buy it anymore for anything. Good brass is cheap when considering the cost of using up a barrel or three in an overbore magnum......That and a 5-10% reduction in powder usage add up over time. Rum brass is very hard to come by at times and certainly far more expensive as well.
I love my Rum's for sure and they won't be going anywhere but I also realize that 10-20 years from now it may well be all but impossible to find brass for them and if I can the cost will be ridiculous. That isn't going to be a problem PRC shooters are likely to deal with at least for the rest of this century.