The can should be removed when hunting!
The can should be removed when hunting!
If the PRC has a slight edge with no belt, what advantage is that?I have all four calibers you mention in your original post. I would probably say the 300 PRC first and 7 PRC second. I like the 300 Win Mag and 7mm Rem Mag, but the PRC cases have a slight advantage with no belt.
I give a slight edge to a .30 cal over a 7mm for elk, but both are quite capable.
I agree. How you elk hunt may make a difference if this is a mountain rifle and a light build versus a stationary hunting situation where weight isn't a huge factor.Depends on weight of your build. More weight = less recoil. Which is better for long range target shooting. Long range target shooting you're going to want at least a 30 inch barrel and a 20lb rifle. The 300 PRC and 300 Norma are doing really well in the 1 mile paper matches shooting heavy bullets 230, 250 A tips and 245 burgers. Your going to want a 1-8.5 to 1-9 twist barrel.
Not shooting a 30-378 for target practice 90% of the time beats it lol300 WM, really doesn't give up much to the other 300's out there.
BUT in the 30 caliber realm, the 30-378 Weatherby rules them all at the moment.
Nothing beats bragging rights around the fire when someone says they have a 300 RUM, and you call them a wimp.
Just in my humble opinion guys, being I'm very old I get to have MY OPINION.
If you go with a 7PRC then definitely go with the 1:8. The 300PRC does just fine up to the 230 gr pills with a 1:9. The 245 Berger says it will work in a 1:9 but I know at my elevation of 1200' it's not fully stable in a 1:9. The easy button is to just go with a 1:8 in bothA couple months ago i was dead set on a 7prc until 2 gun shops told me short barrel life. So then thats where i debated on the 30 cal. You all a reassuring my origjnal decisi I n.
So say If i decide to go 7prc, the rifle I'm looking at has a 1:9 twist. Will this be OK for this caliber or would I wanna look towards more of a 1:8. Also if I did 300 prc, it comes in 1:9
7 prc is (on paper) about 10 lb ft of recoil less than a 300. And like you all are saying if I'm pretty well just target shooting, the. Less recoil seems to be more a must have option.
A couple things with belted cases. They headspace on the belt vs. cartridge shoulder and the belt to case joint is a stress riser, so in general…beltless cases will last longer. I have quite a few rifles chambered in belted cartridges, but overall I think there is greater accuracy and longevity potential with a beltless case.If the PRC has a slight edge with no belt, what advantage is that?
If both the 7mm and .300 are quite capable for elk, how then does the .30 cal have an edge?
7mm RM preferably a Tikka and with an aftermarket stock fitted.I new to the forum. I was wondering what you alls opinion was on what would be the best cartridge to get for 90% of the time shooting long range target and 10% of the time elk hunting. Initially I was debating on 4 options, 7 prc, 7 rem mag, 300 win mag, and 300 prc. I decided against the prc's due to short barrel life. Here lately I been pretty confident about going 300 win mag, especially with future reloading. Is there something better I'm missing or is this a solid decision.
We have never had issues with 7mm RM we think the belt issues are probably user issues plus some other mythical problems added in. I went down to a 280AI for various reasons, but the belted issue certainly wasn't one of them.A couple things with belted cases. They headspace on the belt vs. cartridge shoulder and the belt to case joint is a stress riser, so in general…beltless cases will last longer. I have quite a few rifles chambered in belted cartridges, but overall I think there is greater accuracy and longevity potential with a beltless case.
I have many, many 7mm and .30 cal rifles in various chamberings and I like them all. I just think you have greater margin for error if you use a .30 cal over a 7mm with elk. Heavier bullets and makes a bigger hole.