T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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694.1 | Variety is the spice of life | XCUSME::NEWSHAM | I'm the NRA | Tue Jul 17 1990 03:58 | 7 |
| Variety is the spice of life. People like to tinker and
experiment. Without people like this, life would be too boring. Just
look at what the Handgun industry has done in the past few years:
.41 Express, .40 S&W, .10 MM....Is there a need for more handgun
calibers ? I have no need for 'em, but someone does.
Red
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694.2 | and besides, there's always an excuse to buy a new gun :-) | HEFTY::CHARBONND | ain't no Prince Charming | Tue Jul 17 1990 09:16 | 9 |
| a) There are more 7mm bullets than .270 bullets available.
b) The 7-08 fits in a shorter, lighter gun than the .270.
c) Larger bore means ability to handle heavier bullets.
d) 307 and 356 are rimmed versions of the 308 and 358, allowing
same firepower in lever-action tubular-magazine guns. (Some
folks *like* 'em.)
e) the 416 Remington combines the trajectory of the .375 H&H
with the power of the 458 Win. Nice when you're in the field
with critters that can eat you for breakfast.
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694.3 | always trying to better whats available | SALEM::MACGREGOR | | Tue Jul 17 1990 09:30 | 13 |
| Someone will always be trying to get something a little better.
The .280 does better than the .270. But when you look at the difference
between the 30/06 and the .270 the /06 is just a bit better than
the .270, but the main reason someone developed (at least this is
what I think) the .270 was to reduce recoil and to a caliber that
would shoot comparable to the /06. The same can be said about the
.308, back in the 50's when it was developed people were saying
that it was not understandable why the gov't would come out with
this cartridge when the .300 Savage was already available. Now look
what has happened. The .308 has become almost a standard and the
.300 Savage has taken a back seat. I now when and if I can afford
a new rifle it will be a .280.
Bret
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694.4 | Give me more, I think it is great! | WENGEN::HOHWY | Just another Programmer | Tue Jul 17 1990 09:42 | 66 |
|
I think .-1 was right, but there is obviously also more
to it than merely the idea of creating something different.
Consider:
.280 Rem was originally developed for use in the Remington
autoloaders, which had a hard time handling the high pressures
which the .270 Win is loaded to (.270 Win 57200 c.u.p. vs.
.280 Rem 50900 c.u.p, both "average working pressure limits").
It is perhaps ironic that the .280 only became really popular
(to my knowledge) for use in bolt actions where one would assume it
could safely be loaded to higher pressures. Apart from that,
the .280 offers the ability of using all the wonderful 7 mm
bullets (of which there are more than .270) with the 30-06 size
case.
The 7mm-08 fits into the short actions made for the .308 Win case.
This allows short "carbine" type rifles to be built (saving
about 1/2 inch in the action alone). This type of cartridge is
inherently accurate, and has obtained considerable popularity
for various target shooting disciplines (metallic silhouette
springs to mind) to prove it. Besides, with a 7mm-08 you obtain
splendid ballistics from short barrels, without burning more powder
than necessary.
The various .416 factory cartridges were welcome arrivals
in places where the .458 Win had long been the only affordable
alternative. Many knowledgable shooters had long pointed
to the inability of the small capacity .458 to perform well
on dangerous game (such as the African big five) even at
relatively short distances. And even if you liked it at short
distances, then it was pretty obvious that the cartridge was
a best a 150 yard proposition. That left you with options such as
the .375 H&H (which is wonderfully flexible, but which some people
consider to be marginal for the really big stuff) or the more
expensive way such as a custom rifle in one of the old English
calibers. Some people had long been noting, that what was really
needed was something like the ballistics of the old .416 Rigby
- 400 grs of lead at about 2400 fps. You could have this (albeit
at a price) in one of the .416 wildcats such as the Hoffman or
the Taylor. So along comes Remington and presents us with a
virtual copy of the .416 Hoffman (and Weatherby did their normal
turbo-charge job :-). So now you have a cartridge for which you
can obtain factory loaded ammo, cheap brass, cheap rifles, more
energy than a .458 and at close to .375 trajectories. Sounds
pretty good to me :-).
As you can hear, I am the kind of person who thinks constant
development is to the benefit of us shooters. I like the
variety (even if the good old 30-06 is still one of my favourites)
presented by all the various factory loads. In the future I'll
also venture into the wonderful world of wildcats, just for
the pure fun of it. I say: the more variety the better, it
allows us a better choice, and it adds spice to discussions like
this no end :-).
- Mike
P.S. There are about as many European cartridges as there are
American ones. How does the idea of the 7 X 64 (the Central European
30-06 equivalent) strike you? Or for the big stuff: 9.3 X 74 R,
which Ian described so well to us a few notes back. So as you
can see, the variety is endless :-).
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694.5 | p.p.s | WENGEN::HOHWY | Just another Programmer | Tue Jul 17 1990 09:49 | 20 |
| RE:
<<< Note 694.2 by HEFTY::CHARBONND "ain't no Prince Charming" >>>
-< and besides, there's always an excuse to buy a new gun :-) >-
Could not agree more....
>> d) 307 and 356 are rimmed versions of the 308 and 358, allowing
>> same firepower in lever-action tubular-magazine guns. (Some
>> folks *like* 'em.)
And loaded to lower pressures for lever actions such as
the Model 94 and the Marlins.
P.P.S. I also like Carmichael better than O'Connor -
sorry if I just admitted to heresy :-). But Carmichael's
"Book of the Rifle" is a true tour de force.
- Mike
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694.6 | | HEFTY::CHARBONND | ain't no Prince Charming | Tue Jul 17 1990 10:11 | 5 |
| re .5 Mike, I think the 307/356 are loaded to about the same
pressures as the 308/358. The difference is that flatnose or
roundnose bullets must be used, yeilding lower energy at the
long ranges. The lever guns built for these 'hot' cartridges
are much more stout than the 30-30 guns.
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694.7 | I stand corrected | WENGEN::HOHWY | Just another Programmer | Tue Jul 17 1990 10:37 | 20 |
|
RE: <<< Note 694.6 by HEFTY::CHARBONND "ain't no Prince Charming" >>>
Actually, I think you may be right :-). My reloading manuals
certainly don't seem to say anything about lower pressures.
Apologies from a devoted bolt-action fan :-). My Speer manual
does say that the .307 brass has much thicker side walls
than the .308 cases.
I wonder what the SAAMI pressures for these cartridges are?
Any takers?
Btw. I find it quite extraordinary if it is possible to build
lever actions (a'la Model 94) to be strong enough to handle
bolt-action like pressures. Hmmm, maybe I'll have to revise my
perceptions about those old bangers... :-)
- Mike
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694.8 | | KNGBUD::LAFOSSE | | Tue Jul 17 1990 11:24 | 37 |
| regarding pressures in lever actions et all...
One of the reasons (among others) that the .280 never caught on
originally was because hunters had heard that Remington had to reduce
pressures to allow the round to be safely used in their 742 autoloader
and 760 pump...
as far as have more bullet weights to offer in 7mm vs .270... I don't
buy it. look at the 30-06, theres a whole slew of bullet weights
available to use, but who in their right mind is gonna hunt varmints
with it... certainly no serious varminter. and for deer your best
possible bullet selection is a 165 grainer... for moose you might opt
for the 180, possibly 220... but how often will your average joe be
using the full gammit of bullets in this cartridge? probably never.
The difference in bullet weights, between .270 and .280 in a useable
range are so miniscule as to be negating.
For deer sized animals hunters should be using 130's in the .270 and
140's in the .280, at least thats what the bullets were constructed to
perform well on. There is a mere 90 foot lbs difference at the muzzle,
and the gap barely widens to 150 foot lbs out at 500 yds. In the .280
the 150 grain bullet has 200 foot lbs lees than the 140 grain selection
at 500 yds. The .280 is comparable in the velocity dept. but the .270
is flatter, so wheres the advantage? I'm not saying one is better than
the other, but the selection based on bullet weights alone is not really
a logical one, but who said hunters are logical...
Variety is the spice of life and the more the merrier... but there
should be no "one gun can fire them all" thinking.
without variety we'd have no 25-06 cause the .243 can do the same...
there'd be no .243 cause the .220 swift can do it too, no 6mm PPC cause
we already have the 6mm rem. Keep em coming!
Fra
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694.9 | .270 = flatter? | SALEM::MACGREGOR | | Tue Jul 17 1990 14:27 | 16 |
| Fra,
I have to disagree with you on shooting flatter. Using comparable
bullet weights (.280=154, 30/06=150 and .270=150 grains) the .280
shoots the flattest, next is the 30/06 and then the .270. This is
at 300 yards, which in this area doesn't happen very often when
hunting in New England. But the seperation between the three is
almost 2 inches with the 30/06 right in the middle. But there are
also some hunters out there that use the 110 gr. and 30/06 accelerator
for varmints. And with good success too. Using the 110 gr. is only
10 gr. more than the varmint bullett for the .270 if I am correct.
The reasons that most people, that I have talked to, select the
.270 over the 30/06 is recoil. The .270 is not a bad round but I
prefer the 30/06 or even better the .280 over the .270. But it doesn't
really matter when the meat is put on the table, it all tastes the
same.
Bret
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694.10 | more biased data | KNGBUD::LAFOSSE | | Tue Jul 17 1990 15:37 | 13 |
| Bret,
when i said flatter i was refering to bullet weights that you would
actually use for the job at hand, since i would'nt use 150's for deer
in a .270 i didn't use these numbers... it's kind of biased data
i admit, but you use 130's in a 270, 140's in a 280, and 165's in an
30-06 for deer sized game. Granted you could select other bullet
weights, but these numbers represent the optimum weights for deer,
antelope, goat, sheep and caribou.
FWIW, fra
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694.11 | All nice choices | DECALP::HOHWY | Just another Programmer | Wed Jul 18 1990 04:27 | 45 |
|
Re: the last few.
In the end, the differences between the calibers compared
(.270 WCF, .280 Rem., .30-06 Sprgfld) are pretty miniscule
They are all *great* deer cartridges, and will get the
job done at all reasonable ranges. I've often played with
comparing ballistic data and found the differences pretty
minor, but then again judge for yourself:
.270, 140 grs Nosler Ballistic Tip
.280, 150 grs "" "" "
.30-06 165 grs "" "" "
These bullets represent a fair medium (not the heaviest, not
the lightest) for all of the calibers. They will handle
deer anywhere. I chose the ballistic tip bullet because
it exists in all the above weights. I would have chosen
the Partition, but it is not available in .270 140 grs.
The trajectories with a 200 yds zero are:
Caliber Muzzle Velocity (fps) 300 yds drop (in) Energy (Ft-lbs)
.270 3000 -6.6 1794
.280 2900 -7.2 1785
.30-06 2800 -7.8 1851
The cited velocities should be obtainable from normal hunting
rifles.
What do you say guys, can you tell the difference between
a 7 or an 8 inch hold-over at 300 yds (in hunting situation)?
I think it really is a question of what you happen to pick
up and like. Granted there *are* differences in trajectories,
but I think in the end it is more a question of what you know
and have confidence in that really matters.
When we move up to larger animals, the heavier calibers probably
hold the edge for versatility (which is where I belive that
there *is* a difference) due to their larger bullet weight and
diameter. For deer size animals they are all close to perfect.
Obviously, the lighter calibers kick a bit less.
- Mike
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