- Thread starter
- #41
- Oct 30, 2004
- 24,901
- 4,899
Win 748
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: this_feature_currently_requires_accessing_site_using_safari
Thank you.Win 748
As a fellow lefty I noticed that rifle too. Pretty tough to beat that package for hunting in grizzly country. I would get a supply of brass and reload for it myself. Weatherby makes awesome ammo but I'm sure you could get some great loads pretty easy.I’m very interested in the 338 RPM. Weatherby does make a left handed 18 inch barrel chambered and 338RPM.
The factory ammo seems pretty pricey. Would I be better off developing a load?
Developing a load for whitetail would be cool.As a fellow lefty I noticed that rifle too. Pretty tough to beat that package for hunting in grizzly country. I would get a supply of brass and reload for it myself. Weatherby makes awesome ammo but I'm sure you could get some great loads pretty easy.
Sorry Fotis I missed this one. Very Gracious of you. Thanks! Just had another cousin move back to Gods country. Now if I could just get myself there.... I will keep it in mind if I get the Ford that far west. CLWish I could help you Troy! And no you wouldn't have to pay. I do it for people I do not particularly like so for you it would be a pleasure.
if you're already set up to reload , definitely yes , load for it . or if reloading is something you have wanted to do , yes do it . for what everything costs today , and the cost and availability of components I'm not sure I'd start reloading for just one rifle .I’m very interested in the 338 RPM. Weatherby does make a left handed 18 inch barrel chambered and 338RPM.
The factory ammo seems pretty pricey. Would I be better off developing a load?
Your opinion makes allot of sense and I will consider it.At first, the 338 RPM appealed to me as well...
While not a true apples-to-apples comparison:
When I look at the powder burned in a 24" vs 18" barrel with a 225 gr AccuBond, you get 2800 fps vs 2660 fps (loss of approx. 23 fps/inch), and then look at my 338-06 with a 215 gr bullet getting 2750 fps from a 22" barrel, and burning over 10 grains of powder less, I think I'll stick with my 338-06, and 338 Federal. Wby's factory load with the 210 gr Partition also gets 2750 fps in my rifle (as advertised). Even the 338 Federal is capable of over 2700 fps with a 225 gr AccuBond from a 24" barrel, as per Nosler's load data.
But this is just my opinion...
Being a fellow left handed shooter, I understand your plight!Your opinion makes allot of sense and I will consider it.
I have a few obstacles budget, being left-handed, and not owning a bolt action yet.
Right now I own a Remington 7600 16.5 inch barrel chambered in 308. I use the 7600 for Whitetail deer in the northeast. I love that gun. It takes a beating, BUT it isn’t made well.
As a matter of fact, I discovered that the buttock became loose during a long still hunt.
When I got back to the trailhead, I was pretty pissed off about it and I was happy that I didn’t walk up on a buck and have an issue to cycle through.
This got me thinking. Since I’m building points out west and I’m 100% committed to chasing whitetails in the mountains of the northeast maybe I should get a bolt action rifle that will do it all. They are reliable and light. I want something short and handy being the style of hunting that I do. Snow tracking and still hunting.
I’m not really looking to get out past 500 yards because I most likely will not feel comfortable taking an animal further than that. Although I do plan on going to a precision rifle course with the Sig academy. For now inside 500 yards will do. I do like the sectional density of a 30 caliber so when I found a 338RPM, I took a liking to it.
One thing I did not like about the 338 RPM is that it is a proprietary cartridge that cost $105 a box.
That sent up a red flag.
Unfortunately, right now I don’t have the budget to have several different rifles for each species. I need a do all preferably something that is accurate out of 500 yards with a short barrel for thick timber.