You don’t say what type of deer and what sort of ground/conditions.I’m looking at buying my first stalking rifle and can’t decide should I get a 243 or 6.5C? So I thought why not ask you guys with a hell mo experience than me.
What are the advantages and disadvantages off each?
Thanks
Stuart
Mainly Roe, Fallow and Muntjack also Charlie in Hampshire so fields and small blocks of woodland.You don’t say what type of deer and what sort of ground/conditions.
Then either will do, but I prefer Creedmoor for fallow.Mainly Roe, Fallow and Muntjack also Charlie in Hampshire so fields and small blocks of woodland.
PRC is great, but if you think 30/06 is messy…6.5 Creedmore.
Been using my 243 weekly for the past five years and while it’s ace on small deer, it just doesn’t have the knockdown power on fallow using 80gr copper - far more pencilling through and follow ups required since switching from lead.
I find my 30.06 causes too much damage on small deer and I lose the sight picture, so just renewed with a new 6.5 grant - was thinking PRC but don’t homeload so a non starter. Looks like I will be joining the 6.5 Creedmore club as a middle do all calibre as it has a reasonable supply of factory ammo available.
I own a Tikka M55 in .243 and it's build quality is top class, so I recommend bagging one if you can.
The Creedmoor can do everything the 243 can and then a lot more if you so wish.
For shooting varmints why is a 55g bullet at 1200m/s "better" than the 90g at 1000m/s?In the context of stalking, yes.
But 6.5mm is currently lacking in lighter (varmint) bullets. If you take 55gr 6mm and scale the weight to 6.5mm you're around 65-70gr depending on whether you use second or third exponent. Lightest widely available 6.5mm bullet is IIRC 90gr Varmageddon. Hornady seems also to have suspended the production of most widely known 6.5mm varmint bullet, the 95gr V-Max. So you're currently stuck around the 1000m/s mark with "regular" 6.5mms while 243 is almost 1200m/s with 55gr.