A much more useful comparison is between 143gr Eldx in CM against a standard factory 130gr soft point in .270. At the moment it’s close to impossible (if not actually impossible) to find the 145gr eldx in .270 here.
If it were straightforward to find factory eldx loads in .270, I would probably still have one. Now that I’m starting to reload, I may go back again. However, having had a bit of a look, there are almost no guns available of the spec I would want, and it would have to be a semi custom job.
Nope. Anyway if you want to compare the 143 vs 130gr, now you can!
One of the biggest problems with these infernal cartridge and calibre comparisons is the tendency for those doing the comparison to pick bullets that are in different classes. By comparing bullets in the same class you get a much better idea of the relative differences. The 143 & 145gr bullets are both in the upper tier of weights for each cartridge, and the 129 & 130gr are in the middle tier. Whether you can get the bullets or not is of no concern to me! Though I suspect as always it is a case of seek and ye shall find.
I suppose one way of answering your question slightly less objectively @North Stalker, is that of the CF rifles I own, the two that are shot the least (by far) are both .270 Winchesters. One is a very long-term “loan” off a mate who is living overseas and probably never coming back, a Weatherby in a walnut stock. The other I bought just so I could get the scope it came with because the seller didn’t know what he had and hopelessly undercharged. It’s a Thompson/Center with the 5R barrel. Remarkably for such a cheap and nasty rifle (the stock is horrible), it is very, very accurate indeed.
I feel so unattached to both of these rifles that they live down on the one farm as general hacks for use by whoever happens to be going to grab a quick deer and needs a rifle. They both wear simple Plex reticle 3-9x42 scopes. Neither is moderated and I hate shooting them for that reason. In the simplest possible terms, they both work. Emphatically.
What I guess I am saying is that I see the 6.5 Creedmoor as the perfect prone position deer sniping rifle. Low recoil, extremely accurate, fantastic ballistics, a rifle that I can (and do) literally shoot all day, and enjoy it. The .270 on the other hand is a rifle that I would be happy to carry and use as an off hand, snap shooting deer flattener in situations where I wouldn’t be anywhere near as prepared for the shot as if I am when using the Creedmoor.
So two very different situations, calling for two different rifles! My prone shooting rifles are deliberately very heavy and built for the purpose and don’t make a good carry rifles. I shoot a lightweight .308 in the same way that I would shoot the .270, and within 300m or so I see the two as basically one and the same in terms of outcome. I just prefer the .308 because it is an infinitely more flexible cartridge than the .270.
So if I were you I would keep and use both rifles according to your situation. And get some more because you know that you can never have enough.


