Many of the younger people who make up most of those interested in long range today, are actually unaware of what took place in long range cartridges before they were born in many cases.
Its no secret for example that the very old 300 and 375 H&H cases are responsible for paving the way for many of the modern day marvels.
Those cases are what put Roy Wetherby in business.
His small niche in his early days after WW2 was rechambering rifles to his improved version of those cases.
Cases were made by fire forming the H&H cases to his chamber.
In the 50s and 60s there were a few gunsmiths who were using his cases for wildcatting some of their own designs.
That led to the original 6.5x300 Wetherby in the 50s.
Which came about as a result of a 139 gr match bullet made by Norma, which had a very high BC.
It was also illegal for hunting in PA, where many of those guns were being used, because it had a metal jacket.
The 30x378 Wetherby was created by a few people including Howard Wolfe, a farmer/gunsmith from PA, who in the 60s created a 3 lug custom action specifically for that cartridge.
Howard was also an early competitor at the then recently established 1000 yard club at Williamsport.
As was the 6.5 guru Alex Hoyer.
Howard came to realize that the 30x378 had limitations for 1000 yard competition due to the longer barrels required.
Very few barrel makers were offering them at the time.
So he decided to modify the 378 Wetherby case by shortening it so that he could use say a 30" Hart barrel.
He called that the Wolfe version, others called it the short Wolfe. Others including me simply called it the little Wolfey.
I had guns in both the full size, and the little Wolfey size case.
Both guns were built by Howard, one on his action, and little Wolfey on a Wetherby mark five.
About 10 years ago a guy who is a member of this site came to our camp for bear hunting. He had recently had a gunsmith rebarrel his 700 Rem and chamber it in 300 Norma.
He showed me one of his cartridges, and i said sorta joking that it looked alot like little Wolfey.
So we took one of his empty cases and one of mine and weighed them. After which we filled them with water and weighed them again. And guess what, there was only one grain difference in them.
So my mind went to work on the question of where the idea for the 300 Norma might have come?
None the less, im sending 190 gr bullets at 3400 fps with it,
and if you hit a deer in a not perfect location with it, he is still going to be your deer, period, end of story.