Compiling an ‘ideal’ rifle battery

Thanks for all the suggestions so far, lots of food for thought.
I would be happy with just a .22lr, a 7x57, and a 9.3x62/404J.
 
For me

.22 Subsonic Rabits Squriels etc

22/250 55g Fox dedicated night vision

243 70g Head shot any deer

308 150g walk and stalk + everything else in the UK & 180g boor

338 250g Lapur Magnum for long range

I like the idea of a 9.3 X 62 for big game but I wouldn't likely ever do big game so not realy an issue
 
I'd say you have it covered . I agree with your idea of rebarreling the 06 to a 280 . With bullets of 180 grs or less , the 308 doesn't give up much to an 06
on the flip side - 308 doesn’t do anything a 30-06 can do. So I’d rebarrel the 308 to 280 (assuming it’s a full length action)...

otherwise I’d say you have a very well rounded battery! Although you probably need an open sighted short range heavy hitter like a 45-70 too...
 
This is a topic that has me going in circles more often than not. As a lefty I am always on the lookout for good rifles to build up my ideal battery. I have set a limit of around 5 rifles as I would want to know them like the back of my hand. There are so many variables to consider.
Initially I gave thought to building a do it all battery based on regular increasing bullet weight: 50gn (.22), 150gn (6.5mm/7mm/.30), 250 (9.3), and then a big bore +400gn.

As it stands my battery (4 in the UK, 1 in South Africa) is as follows:
.22lr CZ 452
.243 Ruger No.1
.308 Ruger M77 Hawkeye (South Africa)
.30-06 Winchester M70 Classic stainless and walnut
.375 CZ 550 Safari Magnum.

My current thinking is to rebarrel the Winchester to 280 and add a synthetic stock and longer range scope (i.e. foul weather hunting and range days).
Most of my hunting is done in Africa, but I would like to start hunting here (I have a DSC1) and also in Europe.

Any input would be most welcome.

This really isn't that bad as an all round battery

Got a .22lr because you always should.
.243 Ruger number 1 - Would you change this for another bolt action? Some of the 6mms do quite well for the longer range target stuff (Proper twist rate barrel)
.308 Hawkeye - as it is in South Africa you arugably have space for a UK slot between your .243W and you could argue for a 6.5 or 7mm to fill that space, especially if it was a Long range target type rig* (More below)
.30-'06 Winchester - you can literally hunt anything in world with this that doesn't get into DG territory. I would leave it alone
.375 CZ550 Safari Magnum - again, really versatile chambering. Wouldn't mess around with it.

You do need a nice little .222 or .223 Rem. I'd go for a CZ527 .223 Rem in the American or Varmint but there are lots of choices out there.

Now, your 6.5/7mm longer range target build - I went through this thought process for my longer range hunting / Bisley build. Have a look at "Beanfield Rifles" as an idea for a compromise.

Chamberings I would consider
6.5 Creedmore - if you really must...
6.5x55 - The Swede gives you lots of options in factory and performs similarly to Creedmore. Also more Mauser type rifles in the 6.5x55
6.5 PRC - Looks interesting but a real hand loaders proposition (Weatherby and 264 Win Mags not easy to feed even if you hand load and barrel burners)

In the 7mms
7mm Rem mag is well known, Lots of ammo choice and load data but needs a magnum bolt face action and is belted which bothers some people for reloading.
280 Rem (or AI) looks an interesting proposition but in Europe really a hand load only option (the French seem to have a penchant for it, especially in auto-loaders though). The AI gives you 7mm Rem mag performance without the belt.
284W - Seems to have got some real interest among the "F-Class" Fraternity. Understand has a rebated rim though so some say difficult to feed but my experience of this is limited I'm afraid.
7x64 - This was my choice. Quite a bit of factory ammo in Europe. Also quite well thought of in sub-Saharan Africa. Usually has a longer throat and 1:~8.7 twist so stabilises the long, heavy bullets for long range shooting (NB - 280 Rem and 7x64 are virtually the ballistic twins of each other so if you want that kind of ballistics, pick the one which floats your boat)

You can get other faster 7mms like the 7mm Weatherby and 28 Nosler but these look like real powder and barrel burning monsters.

A word on twist rates: get one which will comfortably work with the bullets you want to shoot.

And whatever you choose, enjoy your shooting.

Scrummy
 
Don't think there is a wrong answer here. Really easy to get down to very few if wanted.
For example my battery is:
22lr for small game
38/357 for fox, could do muntjac CWD also
7x57 main deer rifle, longer range fox
9.3x57 deer

However I have a large case .458 inbound that could easily replace the 9.3mm, even the 7mm, and it probably will. Muntjac to Tembo sorted with one rifle. A decent 375 would do that too being such a great compromise calibre.

So the 22lr, 357, and 458 sorts me for everything I do and don't need more, but as rifle guys we tend to want pretty niche stuff with a rifle for rabbits, short range fox, long range fox, night fox, small deer, big deer, far away deer, boar etc etc.
My 9.3mm will go, 7mm MAY stay as back-up. Taking the UK 6 with an open sight big bore is a very nice thought though.
 
All been said really

My collection

.22 LR - invaluable
.177 HMR - great but could be swapped for 204 as .223 has now been sold and 204 would just about fill the gap
6.5 x 55 swede - love it
9.3 x 62 covers bigger deer here and boar plus boar and plains game abroad
404 J - still in ''begging mode'' from the nice people at Devon and Cornwall for this caliber but it is a niche requirement for 'stopping a charge'.
 
For me it's not as simple as just the chambering, rifle features come into it as well. For a hill rifle I want a bolt action with a 3-12 scope, a moderator, a barrel long enough to make the most of the chambering and a blind/drop plate mag. For a boar rifle I want a 20/22" barrel, 1-6 scope, a muzzle brake and drop out magazine, ideally in a straight pull. My long range gun is 15Lbs with a 4.5-29x56 scope - I wouldn't want to take that on the hill.

Add to this a small vermin rifle, a foxing set up with dedicated NV/Thermal, a smaller deer species gun and something big for DG and you soon get to 6 in the cabinet.
 
Thanks for this great bit of advice. I would swap out my 243 for a 6.5 (beanfield/range/hunter) if I could only find a quality left hand rifle, preferably CRF (in keeping with all my others). The only option currently available in the UK is the Ruger M77 Hunter in 6.5 CM. I’m just not wild about the Tikka’s and Remingtons etc. Zastava could potentially be bought into the UK but I have heard they need loads of work. Otherwise I would rebarrel the no.1 to 6.5x57 and then my lineup would be:
22lr
6.5x57
30-06
375

The hunt would then be on for a 22 hornet.


This really isn't that bad as an all round battery

Got a .22lr because you always should.
.243 Ruger number 1 - Would you change this for another bolt action? Some of the 6mms do quite well for the longer range target stuff (Proper twist rate barrel)
.308 Hawkeye - as it is in South Africa you arugably have space for a UK slot between your .243W and you could argue for a 6.5 or 7mm to fill that space, especially if it was a Long range target type rig* (More below)
.30-'06 Winchester - you can literally hunt anything in world with this that doesn't get into DG territory. I would leave it alone
.375 CZ550 Safari Magnum - again, really versatile chambering. Wouldn't mess around with it.

You do need a nice little .222 or .223 Rem. I'd go for a CZ527 .223 Rem in the American or Varmint but there are lots of choices out there.

Now, your 6.5/7mm longer range target build - I went through this thought process for my longer range hunting / Bisley build. Have a look at "Beanfield Rifles" as an idea for a compromise.

Chamberings I would consider
6.5 Creedmore - if you really must...
6.5x55 - The Swede gives you lots of options in factory and performs similarly to Creedmore. Also more Mauser type rifles in the 6.5x55
6.5 PRC - Looks interesting but a real hand loaders proposition (Weatherby and 264 Win Mags not easy to feed even if you hand load and barrel burners)

In the 7mms
7mm Rem mag is well known, Lots of ammo choice and load data but needs a magnum bolt face action and is belted which bothers some people for reloading.
280 Rem (or AI) looks an interesting proposition but in Europe really a hand load only option (the French seem to have a penchant for it, especially in auto-loaders though). The AI gives you 7mm Rem mag performance without the belt.
284W - Seems to have got some real interest among the "F-Class" Fraternity. Understand has a rebated rim though so some say difficult to feed but my experience of this is limited I'm afraid.
7x64 - This was my choice. Quite a bit of factory ammo in Europe. Also quite well thought of in sub-Saharan Africa. Usually has a longer throat and 1:~8.7 twist so stabilises the long, heavy bullets for long range shooting (NB - 280 Rem and 7x64 are virtually the ballistic twins of each other so if you want that kind of ballistics, pick the one which floats your boat)

You can get other faster 7mms like the 7mm Weatherby and 28 Nosler but these look like real powder and barrel burning monsters.

A word on twist rates: get one which will comfortably work with the bullets you want to shoot.

And whatever you choose, enjoy your shooting.

Scrummy
 
on the flip side - 308 doesn’t do anything a 30-06 can do. So I’d rebarrel the 308 to 280 (assuming it’s a full length action)...

otherwise I’d say you have a very well rounded battery! Although you probably need an open sighted short range heavy hitter like a 45-70 too...

True enough , and I have a Marlin 1895 in 45/70 for the big stuff in close , a favourite rifle of mine . My previous Marlin went home with a certain SD member , he likes it too lol .

AB
 
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