SpeedGoatShooter37
Active Member
- Joined
- Nov 6, 2016
- Messages
- 36
I would agree with adding the .308 as a possibility. Kick is light unless all you've been shooting is old hard rubber pads.
From post #68 (SpeedGoatShooter37) "And you can get 150 grain bullets to 2800 in the 7mm-08, and 140s to 2950."
From MidwayUSA for .308 Win we see Federal Power-Shok 150 gr at 2920 and Underwood 144 gr at 2970.
That makes these loads indistinguishable in recoil for rifles of equal weight and fit.
The Creedmoor will yield a tad less recoil because the muzzle velocity is necessarily less for bullets of the same weight (sectional density counts!). Further, one can go all the way down to 85 gr lead-free bullets if one wants low recoil and flat shooting over the first few hundred yards.
No, it doesn't. You don't know the powder charge which factors into rifle recoil. Again, with both the 6.5 CM and the 7mm-08 shooting 140 grains at maximum velocities, the 7mm-08 carries more energy out to 400 yards. It will have a touch more recoil, but the marginal increase in recoil is offset by the increased energy. Sectional density is important, but again the difference between the two loads is small. Frontal diameter is better with the .284 bullet.
85 grains is too light for elk. You can't shoot 140 monos in .264s because they don't make them. You can shoot 140 monos in the 7mm-08, and with their high weight retention, they penetrate better than a cup and core bullet of equal weight, negating the small SD advantage the 6.5 CM had.