Not even vaguely true. The 147gr ELD-M is designed for 1:8" twist barrels, which is what the vast majority of Creedmoors have. It has a Miller value of >1.8 from memory, the same as the 143gr ELD-X. A few barrels have slightly faster 1:7.5" twists. No factory Creedmoor barrels are slower than 1:8" as far as I know.
The 208gr bullet will stabilise in 1:10" and 1:11" .308 barrels. However the problem is magazine length, many factory .308 mags can't handle the 178gr ELD-X let alone the 208gr, especially if there is seated closer to the lands than SAAMI c.o.a.l. I have an aftermarket mag that will allow use of both, but the 208gr does not shoot well in my 1:11" T3, by far the worst bullet I've tried in it so far.
The 208gr ELD-X is shot far more in the 300 Win Mag and similar long action rifles.
If you want to compare apples, then the best test is the 143gr ELD-X vs the 178gr ELD-X, both commonly used hunting bullets in their respective cartridges.
The argument about 6.5s is a bit pointless. The essence of the 6.5 Creedmoor is that it is an inherently accurate round, extremely easy to load for and available in a reasonably wide range of factory ammunition. Some of the factory ammunition is outstandingly accurate especially the Hornady offerings. The same reports are coming through over and over again, experienced shooters buying a Creedmoor and finding that it is the easiest rifle to set up and shoot accurately at the standard 100yds and out to 600-700yds than any other cartridges they've ever used before.
In part this is due to the fact that factory rifles are being produced with the correct twist right from the get go, rather than traditional twists trying to shoot the long for calibre bullets that are a relatively recent phenomenon.
Also it is down to the mysterious internal ballistics that I do not have the patience or inclination to try and understand fully. The story of the Creedmoor's development is well worth reading and considering in the light of what technologies were available then, compared to when some of the other 6.5's were invented.
Ultimately though if you put experienced match shooter reloaders up against each other with a 6.5 Creedmoor, a 6x47 Lapua and a quality .260 Remington, you are going to have a very tight competition.
I should stop cleaning your barrel.Small primer, Remington Bench Rest 7 1/2 works for me
Top left, cold just cleaned barrel. Then a 3 shot grp. 100yds.
View attachment 120793
Hornady quote a twist rate of 1:7-1:8 so that suggests 1:8 is on the edge of stability.
No it doesn't! Twaddle, as my Grandma would say. It doesn't suggest anything of the sort!
On this one mate, you'll be best placed to admit defeat early and move onto the next battle.
View attachment 120796
You can all give up now. This is three rounds at 200, standing on one leg, in the dark, in the fog, near a hole, with an owl. Whilst eating a bag of chips and under attack by seagulls.
(It's actually three rounds at 50 on a ladder test, but I just thought I'd join in......)
Blindfolded![]()
The point is, it's clearly a very accurate round, that seems pretty easy to reload for !
If you'll admit on th target range the 308 with 208 gr matches the 147 then yes I'll admit defeat on the twist and stability, I had wrongly guessed it would be a similar length to the 150 gr smk which requires 1:7.5 but it's 65 thou shorter it seems.
View attachment 120796
You can all give up now. This is three rounds at 200, standing on one leg, in the dark, in the fog, near a hole, with an owl. Whilst eating a bag of chips and under attack by seagulls.
(It's actually three rounds at 50 on a ladder test, but I just thought I'd join in......)

Afraid not - your assumptions are incorrect.
On paper at any rate, comparative ballistic performance (wind drift + retained velocities) between designs is a straight combination of muzzle velocity and the bullet's BC in any given set of ambient environmental conditions. In this comparison, it's a very simple exercise as the two bullets have near identical average G7 BC values:
147gn 264 ELD-M ................ 0.338
208gn 308 ELD-M ................ 0.335
(Source: Ballistic Performance of Rifle Bullets 3rd edition, Bryan Litz)
So, the question is can a 308 Win rifle in match form achieve the same MVs (or better ones) with a 200-210gn bullet as 6.5X47L, 6.5X55, 260 Rem, or specifically in the context of this thread 6.5mm Creedmoor?
The 'in' FTR 308 bullet in 32-inch barrel custom match rifles is the Berger 200.20X 200gn HPBT model. 2,700 fps is achievable, even a bit more through abusing both barrel and the very strong Lapua 'Palma' small primer case. The cost (apart from bullets costing well over £75 / 100) is barrel life. 2,000 rounds accuracy life is good with such loads.
The Creedmoor with a 30-inch barrel, also using small primer brass (Lapua or Peterson) will produce 2,800 fps or a little more, and up to 2,900 if 'pushed' with very hot Reload Swiss 'EI' type powders. Barrel life is dreadful at the hotter end of that pressure range at 1,000 rounds or less. (ie 6.5-284 levels). I frequently partner a very competent F-Open shooter at Diggle where we shoot F matches over 300-1,000 yards and he used the 147 Creedmoor small primer brass ~2,900 fps MV combination at shorter distances last year winning enough matches to get the club's F-Open championship against very stiff competition and far more ballistically capable cartridges. (It shoots very well to 1,000 and no doubt well beyond, but at 800 and beyond the sevens - 284 / 284 Shehane / 7mm SAUM, 7mm WSM - and the 300 WSM or RUM rule so he uses his 284 Shehane at these distances.)
Most large primer Creedmoor brass such as Hornady's see a short life at anything much over 2,800 fps.
The barrel lasted a bit under a season, the cost of 2,900 fps with this bullet weight, but that's as noted virtually he norm at the top end of national competition FTR with 308 and heavy bullets.
In any event, there is a clear 100 fps MV advantage to the 6.5 cartridge over the 308 and a potential 150-200 fps one. With near identical average BCs, the 308 would need that advantage to be negated to give the same paper ballistics.
Twist wise, the 147 at 2,800 is around 1.58 Sg in a 1:8 pitch barrel; the 208 ELD-M 308 1.54 at 2,700 in a 1:10, so again no issue on paper. However, people are finding that not all of the long, pointy new-generation bullets seem to live up to their ballistic promise at long distances and some are trying faster twists giving higher Sg values to try to overcome what seems to be inherent stability and dynamic balance problems. I know the 264 147 ELD-M works at 1,000 having seen it do so on the very tight F-Class target; I've yet to hear of anyone having long-range success in a top-level match with the 208 thirty in FTR. The one top competitor I know who tried it in a Bisley GB F-Class Association league round was disappointed that excellent short to mid range consistency wasn't carried through to long range. (I had a frustrating time with its 208gn AMax predecessor in FTR use and gave up up on it eventually.)
Question....did you manage to finish your chips..?
Buck.
I should stop cleaning your barrel.
2 shot zero check with game kings at 100 yards, dirty barrel, off sticks, in the dark by torch light, raining and sub zero temperatures. Not technically a 'group' but I know the rifle groups and I know the first and second shot will go exactly where the rifle is zeroed

Edit. I missed the 30" barrel for the 2900 fps
I'm finding the thread, and your information very interesting, but I guess it's made me a little concerned over the load I'm using, in regard to barrel life.
"On paper" / QL, everything looks safe, with regard to barrel pressures, burn rates, etc'. Generally, I do aim to get closer to a 100% fill as well, but this worked.