I don’t hear the deer complaining, so that is ok!Don't worry , it is .
AB
I'd have to disagree. Horrible thing designed by the fool Lloyd for his equally foolish rifles. I had a friend that fell for the "puff" and bought one and the Lloyd rifle to go with it when it first came out. He took it to the hill once and had it fail on a red stag that needed six rounds. The hits were good hits but the bullets failed to do what they should have done. He sold it (at a profit) via a "small ad" in Shooting Times and went back to using his .303 stalking rifle. Marmite I guess, liked or loathed.244 H&H is a very good cartridge.
The 277 Fury or 6.8x51 Sig has been adopted by the US Army as its next generation rifle
I love my swede even if it’s not cool!
On paper it performs very well, and ballistically a bit better than the 243. 244 H&H in the above case let down by the bullets. To be honest I had the same with my 243 on red hinds using RWS ammo. Bullets too soft to penetrate properly through shoulder.I'd have to disagree. Horrible thing designed by the fool Lloyd for his equally foolish rifles. I had a friend that fell for the "puff" and bought one and the Lloyd rifle to go with it when it first came out. He took it to the hill once and had it fail on a red stag that needed six rounds. The hits were good hits but the bullets failed to do what they should have done. He sold it (at a profit) via a "small ad" in Shooting Times and went back to using his .303 stalking rifle. Marmite I guess, liked or loathed.
I had a very elegant P-Hale M81 Classic in 6mm Remington. I never could get it to shoot, rather stabilise past 150 yards, 100 grain Nosler Partition. I sold it in part exchange to McAvoy at Wigan. It's still in 2024 there five years plus later!On paper the 244 Remington also should have worked well. Let down by wrong choice of barrel twist so couldn’t use 100gn bullets on deer.
The 6.5x54 Mannlicher was popular across the empire, so was 303. The 6.5 MS only came in nice mannlicher built rifles - I don’t think anybody else produced civilian rifles in any numbers on other actions. So when Mannlicher moved to the Model M and stopped the Mannlicher Schoeneur it fell by the wayside. In Scotland its original load failed to meet min muzzle velocities when new requirements were introduced in the 1980’s and these were its death nell.
25-06 - another superb cartridge. Fast and flat shooting. But the 243 does everything it can do as regards vermin and small deer, and the 270 does everything else this side of really big stuff.
7x57. Even though called the 275 Rigby, I suspect its German routes didn’t help. Even more the case with the 7x64. In America and UK the 270 Win quickly won really good favour - could do everything the 7x57, 30-06 and 303 could do, but in nicely built and affordable rifles. Why buy a rebuilt old military rifle in the post war era when you could have a modern and affordable Win Mod70, Rem 700, Parker Hale, sako, Tikka in 308win 270 Win or 243 for less money. And much much easier to mount a scope on compared to rebuilt Mauser’s, Enfields etc.
Move to the modern day. The 6.5 Creedmoor - it is a very easy cartridge to shoot. Modest velocity mean that terminal bullet performance is guaranteed, small efficient case and 120 to 140 grain bullet means minimal recoil. Lack of velocity also means the recoil is less jumpy than the 270, 308 or even 243 and most, especially new shooters don’t manage recoil well.
And the 6.5 CM is being chambered in some great shooting modern rifles. However it remains to be seen what the MOD’s ruminations on its use on ranges does to its reputation.
There's few here have heard of the 6.5mm Remington Magnum. But it did once exist. As they tell me did .222 Remington Magnum. So some cartridges may have been around fifty or sixty years but now are seldom seen. Yet in its day I'd say that .222 Remington Magnum was an excellent cartridge.
I shoot the 12,17*44r from 1870ish and the 300blk 2000ish.So, in light of the recent .277 Fury, 6.8 Western, 6.5 Weatherby RPM and 7mm Backcountry. How long does a cartridge have to be in use and available to become accepted and not a flash in the pan or pooh poohed? I would suggest 20 years minimum, maybe even 50?
Many of the standard rounds we use today are 50+ years old, some even over 100 years.
What are the SD members thoughts on the matter?
The Aylestone Gun Company in Leicester had one. They or similar were called "The Mohawk".If that was 'courageous', putting the new cartridge into the short (18.5-inches) barrel, ugly duckling Remington 600 Magnum Carbine was plain weird.
Yes but the 1893 6,5mm commision cartridge was already superior.Yet the 260 Rem is a superb performer let down by lack of hype marketing
It was the go to cartridge for “precision” rifle comp back in the day
Then came 6.5/47
Then came creedmoor
The creedmore fit in an ar10 action and has similar performance as the 6,5*55 in a short action, its also designed for competititon wich the ordinary 6,5 were not.most modern cartridges are just improvements over another older cartridge , the creedmoor does not do anything the 6.5x55 can't do it just does it in a smaller package , same with the 308/30-06 7-08/7x57 etc
the main reason anything is successful now is manufacturer support , amply demonstrated by the super successful 6.5 creedmoor
The 6,8 can be used as a markman cartridge with high pressure and as a machinegun cartride with standard pressure, barrel life doesnt matter so much if the infantry solder lives for 3 minutes of battle.I quite agree. The 6.5X55 is one of my all-time favourite cartridges, but the words of some US gunwriter that I read years ago re longer numbers that require a 'long' action are apposite here. He said of such cartridges and their rifles something to the effect of true magnum performance offerings aside, 'you can't give such rifles away even if you wrap them in five-dollar bills in today's American market.' He wrote those words many years ago, but they are as true of the US mainstream market today as they were then. Probably even more so, only it's 2.26 COAL cartridges to fit the AR-15 platform that are currently seeing ever more performance shoehorned into ever smaller packages.
On top of that, the 6.5X55 is regarded by the typical American hunter as a funny foreign number limited to low pressure loadings. A cartridge that is limited to 46,000 CUP (ca. 51,000 psi), but is actually loaded to 45,000 psi or much less by US cartridge manufacturers is an absolute yawn, a complete non-starter. The same applies to the 7mm, 7.65mm, and 7.92mm Mausers, all superb designs, but fatally damaged by low SAAMI max pressures (absence of any specified listing at all in SAAMI for the 7.65) The factory 277 Fury and 7mm Backcountry with their claimed 80,000 psi pressures and red-hot ballistics might excite a lot of gun magazine readers / Internet forum members, but fill me with horror at the inherent concepts and likely implications as per heat, recoil, and barrel life. Even with a relatively modest 62,000 SAAMI MAP, Hornady couldn't make its early Creedmoor cases strong enough to withstand the pressures and reduced its initial loadings.
I'll make one prediction now - neither of these 80,000 psi horrors will be adopted by any military outfit anywhere with the possible exception of a handful of weapons for extremely specialised applications, and even then, the versions adopted will be nothing like as high-pressure as the existing ones. The .276 Enfield of over 100 years ago which was 'going to replace the .303 in British Army service' ca. 1914/15 is a case in point:
.276 Enfield - Wikipedia
Scroll down to the section on the 1913 troop trials cartridges and their performance. To say they were beset by serious problems caused by the seeking over-high performance / ballistics is an understatement. Quote:
"The troop trial results reported the cartridge produced heavy metal fouling in the bore, heavy recoil, very loud report, undesirable muzzle flash, overheated rifle barrels, and difficulty in extraction (especially with a heated rifle). Overheating caused excessive barrel wear, unintentional premature discharges due to heat in the surrounding environment, and some potentially dangerous pressure indications from cooked off cartridges in (pre-heated) hot barrels, generating (excessive) chamber pressures of about 64,960 psi (447.9 MPa) (about 54,658 CUP). As a safety precaution, the programme was amended so that not more than fifteen rounds were fired without the rifle being allowed to cool off." [my italics]
The 276 Enfield was the SIG Fury and 7mm BC of its era. It's probable it would have been eventually accepted for service, but in a much lower pressure and performance loading, and if so would have given the Empire a poorer rifle than the SMLE it already had and with performance it could have obtained by adopting the 7X57 Mauser loaded with with the 276's lighter higher-BC bullet.
I recently saw a Pre-64 Model 70 Standard Grade in 264WM sell for just under $ 4500 CDN . The higher grade models will sell for considerably more . The Remington 600 and 660s are getting up there as well .Yet again though Remington made some very strange decisions re its (1960s) state of the art 6.5 magnum. Putting aside the not so little matter that the US deerhunting rifle market wasn't comfortable yet with 6.5s of any sort, and US made bullets in the calibre needed more development to become truly reliable and effective, it was a 'courageous' decision (in the Sir Humphrey 'Yes Minister' sense) to design a short, fat, belted magnum for 2.8-inches COAL and short-action rifles. This restricted bullet choice and affected performance. If that was 'courageous', putting the new cartridge into the short (18.5-inches) barrel, ugly duckling Remington 600 Magnum Carbine was plain weird. I can only surmise that having introduced the very successful 7mm Rem Magnum four years earlier in 1962 that they wanted a complementary, not competing 6.5 Magnum. Whilst the conventional long-barrel M700 in 7RM met the needs of the Montana elk hunter and similar for range and hitting power, the M600 in 6.5RM was presumably seen as a shorter-range brush and woodland carbine for smaller deer species. (Some of the bears too?) It must have had some muzzle blast! It was later chambered in the M700, but if a manufacturer doesn't get this right straight off, it usually kills the cartridge no matter what happens later.
Winchester arguably got the design more right than Remington with its full-length 1960 6.5 Winchester Magnum offered in a very nice high-spec longish barrel version of the pre-64 Model 70. Two things are reputed to have destroyed it commercially - it being quickly found it was a true barrel-burner if string fired and allowed to overheat; likely more importantly the competing 7RM coming along just a couple of years later and offering a more versatile package. Still, a very nice, desirable rifle for wealthy Pronghorn and sheep hunters across wide open spaces.
I'm sure @alberta boy has mentioned the modern collector value and desirability of the 600, 660 etc carbines especially in the two magnums - 6.5 and 350. (it's always the same isn't it - yesterday's 'lemons' become today's 'classics' and high-value 'collectibles'!), but I'd imagine a 6.5mm Winchester 70 'Western' in good, original condition must be worth an even larger fortune today.
When I started shooting / handloading nigh on a half-century ago, the 222 Rem Magnum was frequently listed as the most accurate of the 222 cartridge 'family'. In the days when the Sierra reloading manual still included the cartridge, the blurb on the introductory page said that Sierra regarded it as the most inherently accurate centrefire 22 ever made and used it for accuracy testing its 22-cal bullets. For those who've never heard of it, it was in no way a 'magnum' in the common use of that description for cartridges, rather a 223 Rem with the shoulder moved forwards giving ca. 5% greater body capacity with a shorter neck to allow it to stick to the same COAL. It was originally developed by Remington as an experimental AR-15 number when Gene Stoner was trying to sell the concept to the US Army and Air Force. The AR-15 was developed around the original .222 Rem and its 50gn bullet, then the US Army said they wanted a 55gn boat-tailed bullet and another bit of MV to make it effective to 500 metres. Enter Remington with this new design, but Stoner didn't like it for some reason and the 223/5.56 was developed as a sort of half-way house between it and the original 222. That left Remington with a spare cartridge and no user, so they adopted both it and the new 223 and put them both on the market. With all the cheap 5.56 ex military brass that started appearing within a few years, it never had much chance of being a bestseller and eventually dropped into obscurity / was withdrawn. It had a minor revival late in life in that short-distance benchrest shooters necked its case up to 6mm to make the 6X47mm wildcat, a generation before the same designation 6X47 Lapua appeared through necking that company's 6.5X47 down. The 6X47 Rem was the precision cartridge to beat for a few years until Pindell and Palmisano blew everything else in that game away with their PPC.
No they would not have. They had two Magnum 6.5 as well and rejected them. Customers are not that easy to convince. Easy with a good product. Loaded to the eyeballs with the Swede is still 500 bar under 6.5CM pressure. Sometimes it is better to start with a clean sheet not this confusion of different pressure ratings.If American rifle manufacturers had marketed the 6.5x55 as the '.260 Magnum S' (S for Swede) and loaded it to the eyeballs for the Rem 700, Weatherby Model V and Ruger Model 70, Americans would have flocked to it. As the performance and accuracy potential was unmatched. A case that allows for lots of powder (without the massive pressures) and bigger bullets.
However it was not to be.
And there’s no measurable difference between 6.5-284 and 6.5PRC.none if them as cool as the 6.5-284 obviously….
Or the 6.5 Grendel…
Just coincidence that I have those 6.5s
It does amuse me when people get excited about the cartridge not the actual bullet performance.
Its tantamount to people comparing engine displacement rather than performance or the platform its placed in.
One thing I am much more interested in now is the efficiency of a cartridge.
Very very few of the vintage Weatherby, H&H style cartridges can perform to anything like the efficiency levels of more modern designs.
The BR And PPC cases are well known for it but there are lots of other gens out there that have huge potential
The sheer volume of powder required to move a light for calibre/cartridge bullet what is now considered fairly anaemic velocities in cartridges like the 7mmRM, 264 Rem Mag even the 300win mag.
Although the 300wm has significantly better performance in some bullet weights than the 7mm variant.
Its also better matched to the barrel twist.
The 270 is a great cartridge until you step away from the single weight class 130gr or into what is now the normal 20” factory barrels.
Step up to 150gr and the velocity drop is huge. Negating the heavier bullet choice and producing lower energy figures across the board at stalking ranges.
Some of the Norma designed cartridges produce ridiculous efficiency and performance.
But are not well supported by rifle manufacturers
The measure for adoption is brass, ammo, then rifles in my opinion
You can buy brass in all sorts of weird and wonderful chamberings.
But can you buy ammo?
And does anyone produce a factory rifle in the chambering?
I am a new user of 6.5-284
Having shot 270 for decades I was always frustrated with the 150gr limitations of the cartridge.
The 6.5-284 shoots 147gr at .270/130gr velocity with almost 20% less powder!!
The 6.5 Grendel I just built produces over 100fps from every grain of powder in a 19” barrel with 95gr bullets
Thats absurd!!