.338 STA

casey36

Well-Known Member
Joined
Feb 27, 2011
Messages
46
Location
clarion,pa
Has anyone played around with a round like this or on an .375 mag case. I have one called a .338-375RR. Runs with or just bit ahead of a 340 wetherby.
 
I remember the .358 STA……a good cartridge. I don't remember the .338 STA, but with the wide array of .338 bullets available……it should/could be a great cartridge!

But……I can't believe that the .338 RUM wasn't a must have cartridge for many folks! I guess that it couldn't complete with the 6.5 "musthave"! memtb
 
I thought about necking up 8mmRM/7STW to 30/33/37 and had already played with 375 Weatherby cases necked up and down. The performance increase was there, but I went with the 416 Rigby Improved design with various shoulder angles.
I built 2 rifles for a buddy, 1 is a 35-300WSM and the other is a 358STA. Both built on Win Model 70 actions.
Layne Sampson was the obvious inspiration, however, I have never been a fan of 35 cal since my very short ownership of a 35 Whelen, it just couldn't come close to my 338-06 with the same weight bullets.
The 338-358STA would be a fine wildcat, if I remember, it has a 30° shoulder instead of 25°.

Cheers.

Edited to add:
Looked at my notes on my reamer print, the 358STA has a 35° shoulder, and we used A-Square data.
 
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Sometime in the 1980's I had a .375-8Rem. Without a scope it weighs ten pounds. I used duplex loads and got 3,000 feet per second with Sierra 300 grain bullets. At first I was surprised when it fired a 3/8" group, but they became so common I was surprised when I got a group about an inch. I remember I decided to take it deer hunting one year so I took it to the range and fired three off hand shots: six inches. I sat down and fired three more and it was six inches.

A guy watching asked, how good does it do from the bench. I set a target at somewhere between 450 and 500 yards. When I brought the target back the guy exclaimed, "That's a squirrel gun!" The group was 2 1/4". I no longer play with it because I got old and lazy. Now I carry an eight pound rifle.
 
I have a 358 STA. The reason most people didn't wildcat a full length 375 H&H case to a .338 is the 340 Weatherby exists. No real practical difference…
 
IBut……I can't believe that the .338 RUM wasn't a must have cartridge for many folks!
I looked at it, but built a 338 Edge, so simple to neck up brass, dies weren't cheap,
This was Remington's loss opportunity. The .338 Edge is what the .338 RUM should have been, and Shawn Carlock/DE quickly realized it and started building/marketing it.
 
Has anyone played around with a round like this or on an .375 mag case. I have one called a .338-375RR. Runs with or just bit ahead of a 340 wetherby.
What you are trying to do is similar to my .30 Lara (.300 Jarrett Improved). The main advantage is increased brass options/availability. You can use .375 H&H, .300 H&H, 8MM RM, 7MM STW, .358 STA, .416 RM, and depending on your reamer design, you might be able to shoot the .340 Weatherby too, just as my .30 LARA can.

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Good luck!
 
I've been fire forming 375 brass but I'm going to try necking up 8mm mag. brass. I have Redding custom shop dies with a tapered expanding button. I think that will save me some steps. Just need to find some brass!
 
I have a 358 STA. The reason most people didn't wildcat a full length 375 H&H case to a .338 is the 340 Weatherby exists. No real practical difference…
I had a huge lot of 375 cases at the time. About 1500 if I remember correctly. Also alot of 8mm mag that I was using for my 7mm STW.
 
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