Great guy, knows his stuff and does beautiful work. He will give advice if asked but does not try to push his ideas and theories on you. Give him a call
Check out Chad Dixon's, aka Nesikachad, posts here on LRH. He's building a rifle for me at this time. Give him a call, I guarantee you won't be disappointed. http://longriflesinc.com/
Wes
I'd be happy to work with you on this round. It's not widely used in the US but it is a neat little wild cat round with many benefits. Its muzzle velocity is not all that fast for light 60ish grain bullets and muzzle velocity will barely reach 3000 fps. For a super light weight varmint rifle capable of a couple hundred yards it's pretty cool. For a coyote hunter interested in minimal pelt damage this is a great cartridge. Standard .223 brass just necked up to 6mm and fire formed don't get much simpler than that. I kind of forgot about this round until I seen the post.
many moons ago remington chambered their 40 x rifles in something like that.
it was fairly popular among varmit class benchresters.
simply a 222 necked up to 6mm, and called the 6/47.
no relation to the modern 6/47 or coarse.