Rise and Fall of The 6.5 Creedmoor

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  • Опубликовано: 22 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 2,3 тыс.

  • @MrLTW2009
    @MrLTW2009 Год назад +97

    The fact that an entire religion has popped up around hating this cartridge cemented my love of it.

    • @kanehoward7050
      @kanehoward7050 21 день назад

      The religion was created by it's fans, not it's haters. It's not surprising being the Fanboy you are, that you would have that backwards... You're just as bad as 30-06 and 308 fanboys.

    • @whodatking26
      @whodatking26 10 дней назад +1

      Why are people so worked up over the 6.5? I dont get why people lose there minds over someone liking it.

    • @kanehoward7050
      @kanehoward7050 7 дней назад

      @whodatking26 you should turn your question around and you'll get a better idea. Why do people get so excited and Rave about it when there's been flatter shooting cartridges out for a long time before it.

    • @whodatking26
      @whodatking26 7 дней назад

      @@kanehoward7050 how old are you?

  • @carlhansen8672
    @carlhansen8672 Год назад +37

    I just bought a Ruger American Hunter in 6.5 Creedmore and I love it. The recoil is manageable over the 308 I use to shoot. I'm over 70 and it makes deer hunting a pleasure again.

    • @shawnwells5719
      @shawnwells5719 Год назад +3

      I put together a Ruger American Compact in 6.5 Creedmoor with a muzzle brake for my girlfriend. One of the most accurate rifles I've ever shot - first handload I tested grouped into .332" @ 100 yards.

    • @bryanbiltoft8141
      @bryanbiltoft8141 Год назад

      *CREEDMOOR*

    • @mattwilliams7454
      @mattwilliams7454 5 месяцев назад

      This. It's fun to practice with instead of being a chore

    • @riverwalker2173
      @riverwalker2173 Месяц назад

      ​@@bryanbiltoft8141Apollo 🥊

  • @alanroberts3153
    @alanroberts3153 Год назад +536

    This reminds me of an ice cream commercial I saw years ago. The ice cream company talked about all the flavors of ice cream they made. When asked what their best seller was, they replied, Vanilla. Lot's of good old vanilla calibers that will likely long out live the latest and greatest.

  • @jamesbriseno4705
    @jamesbriseno4705 Год назад +56

    I went to a 6.5 creedmoor 5 years ago (Bergara) with Leupold CDS and absolutely love it. Flat, fast & low recoiling. 👏👍

    • @timh4886
      @timh4886 8 месяцев назад +2

      Ditto. Have Bergara B14 BMP. Looking at some hunting rifle options, however why switch calibers. My guess sales/marketing will drive the marketplace and for all the folks who shoot 6.5, I just don't see it going away anytime soon.

    • @jameschristy9966
      @jameschristy9966 3 месяца назад

      I got a 6.5 cm in the b14 ridge

    • @Kpitt2
      @Kpitt2 2 месяца назад

      @@jameschristy9966how do you like the Bergara? I am seeing a lot of bad reviews

  • @97n2oGT
    @97n2oGT Год назад +168

    The 6.5 Creedmoor, and the 6 Creedmoor, really gained popularity too because they fit and feed from a box magazine for the semi-auto shooters. Opening up options for the long range shooters and hunters.

    • @SixOFord
      @SixOFord Год назад +7

      I think the semi autos is where they make the most sense.

    • @jasminebebe3455
      @jasminebebe3455 Год назад +13

      Exactly... I own an AR10 platform in 6.5 and it is amazing. Is it the most powerful laser cannon on earth? of course not. It shoots damn well out to 1000 yards though and even if I wouldn't hunt animals at that range.. it has plenty of energy for the two legged variety.

    • @riverwalker2173
      @riverwalker2173 Год назад +2

      If I had to choose between those two with rifle & ammo availability & price being relatively equal, I'd pick the 6mm most definitely ( would be an ideal cartridge for what I hunt anyhow ). The 6.5 CM seems to me like a jack of all trades but master of none, caliber (tweener).

    • @jasminebebe3455
      @jasminebebe3455 Год назад +5

      @@riverwalker2173 LOL you just described one of the most popular cartridges of all time..... the 308 Winchester.... and yet it is still magnificent. Tweener is pretty much the same as saying "sweet spot" which is a great thing. If you want power and range then 338 Norma mag would be amazing or Lapua or a 50 BMG... or price and ammo availability .22 rimfire... But here we are talking about compromises. 6CM is a great round but ammo availability and price is not even close to the 6.5 simply due to popularity and economy of scale.

    • @stevenlewis6781
      @stevenlewis6781 Год назад +2

      @@jasminebebe3455 That’s spot on. I bought a POF Revolution DI a little over a year ago in .308. It’s sub Moa and it delivers energy downrange like nothing else in the AR15 platform. I thought hard and long about getting it in 6.5 Creedmoor, but ammo prices and “what’s practical “ dissuaded me. It shoots Norma Tactical at 1” and I’ve stocked up with over 1,200 rounds so far. I’m so impressed with this combo that I rarely even bother with anything else.

  • @carrollmcpherson4530
    @carrollmcpherson4530 Год назад +458

    I think Hornady has done one thing to ensure the 6.5 CM's success that no other manufacturer of a non military recently developed cartridge in it's class has cared to consider: made it one of the most affordable and ubiquitous chamberings available. Anyone can come up with a cartridge to outperform the last guy by a little or a lot, but the strategy of making an efficient, game effective cartridge and keeping it affordable as a quality factory loading and letting all the rifle manufacturers chamber it in everything from high end customs to affordable lines like the savage axis and Ruger American was hard to beat! Honestly I think that was what caught everyone else off guard who were developing screaming demons and trying to keep them proprietary (and expensive) for as long as possible. Manufacturers from Nosler to Weatherby were trying to keep the bleeding edge of performance in precision shooting an exclusive cool kids club when Hornady decided to democratize it for the masses!

    • @stevenlewis6781
      @stevenlewis6781 Год назад +37

      As much as I love the.260 Remington, the 6.5 Creedmoor is better. It’s a wonderfully balanced design and as much as it’s detractors will say it’s not any better that the.243 or whatever, it is. More precise SAAMI specs and the ability to shoot a wider variety of bullets, along with most ammunition manufacturers taking care to produce really good ammo are all big advantages.

    • @Roy-tp2iy
      @Roy-tp2iy Год назад +10

      All ammo is what them want higher prices ,ammo needs to come down ,reloading components really need to come down.

    • @terpsurfer7221
      @terpsurfer7221 Год назад +10

      ​@Roy-tp2iy in English please... what do you want them to do? There's a lot of factors that play into ammo manufacturing. There's pretty much one powder supplier and one primer company in the entire country... The US government up until recently prohibited foreign primers. So the manufacturers are feeling it too. They're probably barely breaking even.

    • @millermanhal
      @millermanhal Год назад +3

      You said it better than anyone I have heard. Think your right.

    • @hedge7743
      @hedge7743 Год назад +1

      All true!

  • @getoffmylawn8986
    @getoffmylawn8986 Год назад +77

    I've been extremely happy with the 6.5 Creedmoor. It does everything I need it to do with efficiency and superb accuracy.

  • @davehoward2791
    @davehoward2791 Год назад +132

    I’ve always been an ‘old skool’ guy when it comes to calibers for hunting, .30-30, .45-70, .270 Win, and .30-06. All of these served me well over the decades, and I never bought into the Ultra Mags, Short Mags, and all the other new cartridges that were coming out. Lots of folks like them and that’s good, but I never saw the need as I don’t take 500+ yard shots. A month ago, when my ‘06 started making my old bones ache after a range session, I decided it was time for a lighter-recoiling hunting cartridge. I went with .243 Win. For deer & hogs it’s more than enough, it has a proven track record, ammo is easy to find and cheap, and I can shoot it all day with no discomfort.
    Awesome video Ron, thanks! 👍

    • @soreloser6018
      @soreloser6018 Год назад +3

      Yep. Very valid point.
      For fun The modern load out equivalent of your setup might be 6mm Arc, 6.5 creedmoor, 7mm PRC, the 500sw magnum, and 30-30 because it's just too fun to run that lever action.

    • @HondoTrailside
      @HondoTrailside Год назад +12

      And all those '06 based calibers, and other military cartridges have many advantages of their own. Battle tested feeding, basically they were some of the earlier beltless magnum, etc... Th '06 was a magnum compared to the 08 capacity, or .303, and when you dive down to the 280, 270, 25-06, they are boomers.

    • @actionjksn
      @actionjksn Год назад +6

      Have you tried the creedmoor? You would probably like it a lot as far as performance and recoil.

    • @johncox2865
      @johncox2865 Год назад +7

      I’m sure the .243 is a great deer cartridge. Not sure I’d trust it on hog.

    • @Alan-cw8vy
      @Alan-cw8vy Год назад +18

      270 for me over 40 years. I live in Alaska and been knocking down everything I shoot at.

  • @wyattjones7483
    @wyattjones7483 Год назад +227

    The one thing old Ronny didn't take into consideration is how well the 6.5 Creedmoor adapts to the AR-10 platform. That alone is enough to keep the round in high demand for the foreseeable future.

    • @-joe-davidson
      @-joe-davidson Год назад +25

      I was about to make the point as well. 6.5 Creedmoor AR-10 rocks.

    • @julesbower762
      @julesbower762 Год назад +11

      he misses allot of stuff we all know instinctively

    • @joshsizemore748
      @joshsizemore748 Год назад

      @@The_Watchful_Eyesthat was an interesting lesson. I actually expected the common stuff to be gone because everyone has those calibers and the less common stuff to be available last. Turns out the stuff they don’t keep much of on the shelf goes quick and ammo manufacturers prioritize the most common calibers if there’s a disruption to the supply chain. It makes sense, guess I had to see it play out to realize it. Now I try to stock up on the hard to find stuff knowing the common stuff will almost always be available and will be first to come back if stores get wiped out

    • @plumbum6558
      @plumbum6558 Год назад +2

      That’s the only reason

    • @SoloRenegade
      @SoloRenegade Год назад +7

      exactly, and this isn't his first time proving his ignorance on this issue.

  • @jw3946
    @jw3946 Год назад +10

    I have a 6.5 Creedmoor, 6mm Creedmoor, and 6.8 Western. I love these fast twist barrels … accuracy and precision!

  • @francis4845
    @francis4845 Год назад +106

    Greetings from England. Been target shooting 6.5CRM for a couple of years now out to 1200 yds. Switching to this round has greatly improved my accuracy & I am now a dedicated fan. Readily available rifles in this caliber & reasonably cheap factory ammo means its here to stay.

    • @becomeraptureready
      @becomeraptureready Год назад +4

      You can get a rifle in England? Whats that process look like? From Canada here.

    • @francis4845
      @francis4845 Год назад +12

      @@becomeraptureready Very strict vetting process, no criminal convictions, psychological profiling, letter from your doctor, two references, good security, membership of a shooting club (with safe shooter certificate) & then regular attendance to that club. If shooting game, then a letter from a landowner giving permission to stalk/vermin control/calibers allowed/insurance required/etc. Plenty of guns shops in UK.

    • @becomeraptureready
      @becomeraptureready Год назад +3

      @@francis4845 Are you able to get semi auto rifles? Are you able to get handguns?

    • @francis4845
      @francis4845 Год назад +5

      @@becomeraptureready Only rimfire semi autos, no centre fire semi autos allowed. Pistols have to have a long barrel & a bar/counterweight fitted at the bottom of the grip to be overall 24” long. So effectively considered a rifle & obviously can’t be concealed.

    • @midwesternoutdoorsandnatur8272
      @midwesternoutdoorsandnatur8272 Год назад +13

      @@francis4845
      Oh my. That sounds horrible. Kudos to you for going through all that nonsense.

  • @raymondproulx1095
    @raymondproulx1095 Год назад +157

    6.5 Creedmore is the right tool for me. I generally hunt mule deer and smaller game out to about 300 yards. Super accurate and easy on the shoulder. What’s not to love? You can always find a reason to buy something new. Right now, I have what I need. Keep up the great work.

    • @HondoTrailside
      @HondoTrailside Год назад +7

      +1, which is why a lot of us guys who shoot the Swede never moved in the first place. And there were some excellent custom rifles available cheep as top shooter went for the Creedmore.

    • @REDNECKROOTS
      @REDNECKROOTS Год назад +7

      Well said. It's all personal preference really in the end. No cartridge is better than another. Just diff calibers for different types of uses. Your use will be diff then mine. Nobody is wrong

    • @bryanbiltoft8141
      @bryanbiltoft8141 Год назад +6

      *CreedMOOR*

    • @skyman06
      @skyman06 Год назад +16

      I drop elk, deer, pronghorn with my 6.5 CM every year. I shot an elk at 380 yards last year and it was dead on the ground within 20 yards. I use the Barnes VOR-TX LR 127 grain for all of them.

    • @mattc5647
      @mattc5647 Год назад

      @@bryanbiltoft8141 NEED MORE CREEDMORE

  • @almightybeerman
    @almightybeerman Год назад +14

    I love the 260 rem other than off the shelf ammo is an issue. It's the reason I've gotten into reloading.

    • @JermZ260
      @JermZ260 Год назад +1

      Ive been using my 260 since the nineties and haven't lost a whitetail yet.

  • @junkman1561
    @junkman1561 Год назад +8

    Never had a 6.5, but when looking for something to fit my needs, I chose the 6mm Creedmoor. I really like it.

    • @marcmoore4115
      @marcmoore4115 Год назад +1

      I'm in the same boat! I have a .308, setup in a match configuration... but it's my hunting rifle. So I want to get a new Barreled Action with a more match oriented chambering to drop into the chassis, but I don't want something too similar to .308, so 6.5 Creed is off the table... and Howa now chambers the 6 Creed, so it's the perfect option!
      I will admit that the .25 Creed is one hell of a 'wildcat', especially now that Hornady has that 134gr ELD-M.
      The case for the Creedmoors is simply just incredible... from .22 up to 6.5mm, it seems to tick all the boxes.

  • @plinkspot8750
    @plinkspot8750 2 месяца назад +2

    From South Africa. I bought into the hype of the 6.5 in 2022
    Man am I happy! Sold my 30-06 as it no longer gets used. Shot a massive Wildebeast bull a month ago. Broadside shot with 140gr factory ammo at 350 meters, found the bullet just under the skin of the opposite shoulder

  • @igotfriendsinlowplaces2971
    @igotfriendsinlowplaces2971 Год назад +24

    Love my 6.5CM! I’ve taken two bull elk, two muley bucks and a black bear with mine

  • @entrepreneurialliving
    @entrepreneurialliving Год назад +22

    I know several competitive shooters (PRS) who are going from their 6mm cartridges back to the 6.5. I don't think the 6.5 is going anywhere. I finally decided to see what the hype was about a few years ago. Now everyone in my house owns one. They are just a pleasure to shoot. I think the 6.5cm is here to stay!

    • @jfess1911
      @jfess1911 Год назад +1

      Did they say why? My understanding is that the switch to 6mm was largely to reduce recoil so they could watch the impact location. Then again, it is harder to see the impact of a 6mm bullet than a 6.5mm one.

    • @duckwildcodyjames4330
      @duckwildcodyjames4330 Год назад +3

      @@jfess1911I heard that the barrels only last for like 1000 shots on the 6mm where as they can get like 3-4000 for a 6.5, just one factor.

    • @jfess1911
      @jfess1911 Год назад +2

      @@duckwildcodyjames4330 That makes sense. I understand that, in order to extend barrel life, some shooters transitioned form the 6mm Creedmoor to 6mm Cartridges with lower powder charges like the 6mm ARC, Dasher, or GT. There seemed to be a debate on whether the lower recoil of the 6mm cartridges compensated for the smaller "splash" on or near the target. Maintaining a good view of the target immediately after the shot is pointless if you can't see where your bullet went.

  • @mike-le2xp
    @mike-le2xp Год назад +40

    I have to admit, I went in hard on 6.5 creedmoor. I first got a ruger american predator, like it so much I sprung for the ruger precision and I love it. I've acquired over 1000 rounds " just in case" for it. The thing just DOES NOT MISS

    • @HondoTrailside
      @HondoTrailside Год назад +2

      Fantastic. But the reality is the margin of improvement is really targets only. A lot of the long range bullets are unstable and have poor terminal ballistics. It isn't as though people didn't know what would work, they just didn't want the compromises on game. But given the majority of shooters don't hunt, the time had come for a do nothing practical rifle. Of course it can do whatever you want if one doesn't go full Kool Aid.

    • @actionjksn
      @actionjksn Год назад +2

      ​@@HondoTrailsidethey know exactly how to make the creedmoor perform in a hunting rifle. Even the little Grendel performs really well on deer. As far as being unstable, when a long bullet like that penetrates the target and becomes unstable it is pretty devastating.

    • @MrSpook1968
      @MrSpook1968 Год назад +1

      Just bought the Ruger precision just trying to decide on scope for it.

    • @bencarlyle2155
      @bencarlyle2155 Год назад +1

      ​@@MrSpook1968 I put a strike eagle on mine and I like it Burris mount

    • @lennyj2080
      @lennyj2080 Год назад

      spend the money and get the best Vortex or Leopold scope you can buy.@@MrSpook1968

  • @tehunter6569
    @tehunter6569 Год назад +3

    I always said, 6.5x55 doing all that and more than the 6.5 Creedmoor since 1894. My primary deer rifle is a custom 6.5x55 built on a M96 made in 1900. Love that little rifle.

    • @Dominic1962
      @Dominic1962 Год назад

      But can it fit in an AR-10 mag? Nope. I love all my military 6,5’s but the 6,5 Creedmoor just makes sense in a newer context.

  • @Bixll09
    @Bixll09 11 месяцев назад +3

    Son in law has one of these. Loves it. I have 3, 6.5 x55's. I love those as well. I do load my own ammo, so I have a big advantage tuning my ammo to my guns.

    • @rickterrance4981
      @rickterrance4981 9 месяцев назад

      Do you have any experience "hot rodding" the 6.5 swede out of a mauser action? It irritates me because most of the load data developed for the 6.5 swede is made with 100 year old actions in mind. Modern actions can handle significantly more pressure supposedly and that's when the case capacity of the swede outshines the creedmore. I hand load and I've run plenty of max pressure loads out of my 6.5 swede however I have come across load data from norma that involves high tech newer powders loaded to higher pressures pushing the 140 grain to 2900 which is obviously very good for the swede. Problem is they specifically do not advise to run this in a mauser action. That being said these guns were all proofed at 90k. There's no reason it really shouldn't work its obviously just nerve wrecking and potentially dangerous to do so. That being said I think those who publish loading manuals go out of their way to be extra cautious for liability reasons. Do you have any experience loading for a Swedish mauser action actually pushing it to the cartridges capability?

  • @G5Hohn
    @G5Hohn Год назад +184

    I drank the koolaid on 6.5 early and have zero regrets. It’s the most balanced general use short action round I can imagine.

    • @Brandon-yq1tm
      @Brandon-yq1tm Год назад +16

      The best part to me is that it fits in an AR10 with just a different barrel

    • @lennyj2080
      @lennyj2080 Год назад +7

      I am fine with my 6.5 Savage Model 10 BA Stealth with an MDT chassis. It is extremely accurate out to the very end of the 1,000 yard range I have on my land. It kills everything I have shot out to 815 yards including elk.

    • @charlesbukowski9836
      @charlesbukowski9836 Год назад +1

      @@lennyj2080 why savage? looking at gettting into this

    • @charlesbukowski9836
      @charlesbukowski9836 Год назад +5

      it will be the most 'found' exotic rifle round youll find in SHTF as well.... everybody has one

    • @lennyj2080
      @lennyj2080 Год назад +2

      I've always liked Savage rifles just as I like Sig handguns. When I purchased it I bought it for my wife, to get her into a competitive shooting league. She ended up with a lighter rifle, and I just fell in love with the model and the 6.5 caliber. I've upgraded from it but never leave in the safe very long. We have the major bonus of owning a plot of land that has a fully functional 0-1,000 yard range. So we get to practice quite a bit. I do the precision thing and she does the three gun comps. There are many major brands to choose from, what is the all in budget?@@charlesbukowski9836

  • @clausnepperchristiansen7394
    @clausnepperchristiansen7394 Год назад +43

    Here in Scandinavia, the 6,5x55 is still the most popular. I have been shooting it myself for many years with the 140gr. Nosler Accubond

    • @GeorgiaBoy1961
      @GeorgiaBoy1961 Год назад +5

      Claus, you folks over in Scandinavia must be having a good laugh at our expense - by which I mean in the 'States - since all of you have known the virtues of 6.5mm (.264-cal.) cartridges for close to 130 years! I wouldn't blame you if you said "What took you so long?" I'm part Scandinavian myself, half-Danish, by the way. The Norwegians helped invent the 6.5x55 way back when, and not just the Swedes. Got to give them credit as well.
      The 6.5x55 - especially when loaded to its full potential - can do pretty much anything 6.5 Creedmoor can do, and sometimes better. Many professional hunters and safari guides recommend the cartridge for their clients to use on plains game, alongside such old-standbys as 7x57 Mauser and 30-06.
      Conventional wisdom in certain quarters says that 6.5x55 is not powerful enough to take large or even dangerous game, but Europeans have taken everything from reindeer to moose to bear with it, if the reports I have seen are accurate. It punches above its weight, as the saying goes. 160-grain round-nose puts them down.

    • @clausnepperchristiansen7394
      @clausnepperchristiansen7394 Год назад +4

      @@GeorgiaBoy1961 actually, i found it a bit "light" myself, especially for wildboar and big stags. However lots of people use it for moose and boars in Sweden. I am now shooting .300 Win. Mag. And Ron's favorite the .308 Win. 🙂

    • @branch42
      @branch42 8 месяцев назад

      Ja the 6.5x55 is what the CM was designed to duplicate for AR and shorter bolt actions. the 260 rem just did not have enough neck to make use of the 140gr+ flying spikes that make the 6.5 shine. Worked fine on reindeer in `Island.

  • @PG_Living
    @PG_Living Год назад +12

    Howdy Ron.
    I'm a trucker who spends lots if time listening as i drive. I have Jordan Peterson, Joe Rogan, and Yourself all in my playlist.
    I really enjoy how you talk and break details down. Thanks

  • @bryanmcdermott4204
    @bryanmcdermott4204 Год назад +2

    The Howa 1500 in 6.5 Grendel is fantastic, as are 100 year-old rifles chambered for the venerable Swede, and rifles made last week for Creedmoor.
    They're all terrific.

  • @sylverbullit7192
    @sylverbullit7192 Год назад +26

    I love my 6.5 Creedmoor, but it's great to see continuing progress and lots of options.

    • @jasminebebe3455
      @jasminebebe3455 Год назад +1

      It really was one of the early modern cartridge design and Hornady just keeps em coming with the PRC series. One is for modern box fed semi auto rifles though and that is what makes the Creedmoor special.

  • @Rockhead75
    @Rockhead75 Год назад +6

    I love my 6.5 Creedmoor ! Especially after my first 1000 yard 5 shot group 8 1/2 " group off a crappy plastic table !!

  • @JT-bc5cd
    @JT-bc5cd Год назад +12

    Met a bench rest Target shooter at the range a few weeks ago while I was sighting in my hunting rifle. He was shooting two of his bench rifles, one in 7mm Rem Mag and the other in 6.5 CM. When I asked him which one was his favorite of the two he said "the 6.5 is definitely my favorite of the two right now; it gives me really tight groups with my handloads out to the 500 M that I am shooting, and its so fun to shoot."
    Just one anecdote, but I think there are enough rifles chambered in the round and enough people still enjoying the cartridge that I do not think its going to "fall".

  • @hardball107
    @hardball107 Год назад +9

    I was late to the 6.5Cm bandwagon, only got into it because a friend needed some money and sold me his Savage 12FV for $125. Little did I know out of the box after a week of scrubbing it would put 5 rounds into 3/4" at 100 yards. A look at the ballistics convinced me to drop a Vortex 4x16x44 scope on it and do a little load development. It's down to 5 shot sub 3/8" groups (.330 best so far) with 129gr Hornady ELDx bullets. Sitting on a farms hedgerows 300-400 yard shots on deer are common and I've never had to take a second shot and to my surprise many were thru and thru, bullet performance was excellent and IMHO the 6.5Cm did a better job than a 308. I handload and with a normal 40gr charge of my favorite powder velocity's are in the 2800+ range, compared to my 270 at 55-58 grains that's almost 30% less powder and the 6.5Cm seems to drop those critters just as well. In other words it's cheaper to shoot. With 90 grainers it deadly on 'chucks and yotes, it barely recoils when doing it's job so follow up's on those smaller critters are a breeze. There will always be something bigger and better but it comes at a cost, the 6.5Cm is enough gun for anything up to deer sized game and I believe it produces better marksman with it's accuracy potential, low recoil and lower ammo cost meaning more shooting. What's not to like ?

    • @SEOKLADUCKIN
      @SEOKLADUCKIN Год назад

      Try you some 99 grain Hammer Hunters,

    • @lennyj2080
      @lennyj2080 Год назад

      My Savage Model 10 BA Stealth prefers the 143gr over the 129 but I love Hornady factory ammo...they do a better job than i can at hand loading and I shoot out to 1,000 yards pretty easily with it.

    • @Hawaii_Hunter
      @Hawaii_Hunter Год назад

      Well said! 🤙🏼

  • @SwabJockeyJim
    @SwabJockeyJim Год назад +3

    The 264 WM is a spectacular performer! I used to shoot cans, as a boy of 14, from 400 yards, center punching them every time! The barrels don’t last that long, but a spectacular performer! I was shooting my mentor’s rifle, which made it look easy, and I had no idea these were reasonably difficult shots, but that was the among the best times in my life.
    Thank you, Lou, where ever you are!

    • @mogulrider
      @mogulrider Год назад +1

      Nobody can afford the ammo though. It's $90 a box in Canada. For those that reload it's obviously acceptable. I can buy 6.5 Creed for 24 bucks a box. Sad these older great cartridges are becoming impossible to shoot.

    • @SwabJockeyJim
      @SwabJockeyJim Год назад

      @@mogulrider I do reload, but with the Obama creature that took over the whitehouse, the cost of primers went high; when the Biden creature got in, it was much worse!
      When I started, a pound of powder was roughly $10, a 1000 primer box was not quite $10. A box of 100 bullets was nearly $10+/-, depending on how fancy they were. I could buy 500 cast hard lead SWC bullets for my 44 magnum for $20.
      Fast forward to lately, 1000 primers have been going for $140 on gunbroker, none in stores, bullets vary greatly, but 500 wadcutters are around $80, powders have been over $30 a pound.
      When I started shooting 45 ACP in 1984, I could buy 100 rounds of USA ammo for $8 and change. Blazer had a 100 round tub about the same price, then it went up to $12 per hundred. I complained. The clerk asked if I reload. I said that I don’t shoot enough to reload. He said, “you don’t shoot enough BECAUSE you don’t reload.” He set me up with a set, and I’d load 500 at a time!
      Now, I don’t think it’s cost effective with primers being so high, the exception being $40 or more per box rifle cartridges. With say 9mm, I could buy it for about what I’d spend in money, time and effort.
      If I ever get a casting set and a lube/sizer, I’ll get back into it.

  • @Deadeyejed1126
    @Deadeyejed1126 6 месяцев назад +19

    I Love my 6.5 Creedmoor don’t leave Home without It !!!

    • @reptilesgamers00
      @reptilesgamers00 Месяц назад

      this guys got a slinged rifle walking around Walmart

  • @j-roy6939
    @j-roy6939 Год назад +32

    Thank you Ron, great educator. I appreciate the way you bring in the science and the history. You are the Man.

  • @rossilake218
    @rossilake218 Год назад +4

    I'm 60 and prefer the old rounds. .223, .243, .284, .270, .308, .3006, 7 remmag, .300wmag. That's it! I get the 6.5 Swede, great round. I do want a Win 3030 and 4570.

  • @joe74ta1
    @joe74ta1 Год назад +51

    The 6.5 creedmoor has done so much for the modern shooter making the manufacturers lift there game I love the round and I don't think it's going away any time soon its already made a spot in the history books

    • @jfess1911
      @jfess1911 Год назад +4

      There was a recent Hornady Podcast with Dave Emery, the designer of the 65 Creedmoor. He mentioned that the Creedmoor chamber was designed with tighter tolerances for certain dimensions (the freebore, in particular) that will make the average factory rifle more accurate. For example, the slop around the bullet in the freebore section of the 6.5 Creedmoor is 1/4 that of the 308.

    • @dankruger2890
      @dankruger2890 Год назад

      very good accurate for the lighter kicking gun. you can buy a cheep gun and still put bullets on top of each other

  • @PresMonroe
    @PresMonroe Год назад +1

    Love the Grendel also as a AR 15 replace ! BTW you didn’t mention the 6.5 x 284 …. That is a heck of a round…

  • @ralphgreenjr.2466
    @ralphgreenjr.2466 Год назад +1

    I own and shoot, 6.5x55 Swedish Mauser, .260 Remington, 6.5 Creedmoor, and 6.5-284 Norma. They have pretty much the same effect on game, lights out. Speed and accuracy go to the 6.5-284 Norma.

  • @kcraig51
    @kcraig51 Год назад +20

    Back in the day (way before Creedmore) I dropped more whitetails with a .243 than anything.

    • @barakabarakabaraka
      @barakabarakabaraka Год назад +4

      My old timer neighbor has been hunting with one rifle and one rifle only for the past 60 years, a .243. He has taken dozens of deer with it and dozens of Elk and Moose. I thought he was crazy for using that small of caliber for that size game. His response: "I will not take a shot past 250 yards and when I pull that trigger, I need a guarantee that the bullet lands in within an area smaller than my fist"
      He has never lost an animal in over 60 years of hunting.

    • @charlesbukowski9836
      @charlesbukowski9836 Год назад

      @@barakabarakabaraka Garand wanted to use 243 in the m1 but the dod wanted to use all the surplus 06

    • @baddestmofoalive
      @baddestmofoalive Год назад

      @@barakabarakabarakamy uncle is the same way. Just before the Gun Control Act of 1968 was about to take effect, he mail-ordered a sporterized Mauser chambered in 6mm Remington to his door step. He also bought a keg of surplus powder, a pile of primers, and a crate of 6mm Nosler bullets. He worked up a load and that was it. He still uses that same rifle and reloading stockpile to this day. It doesn’t matter if he’s shooting elk or coyotes, they all get the same 55 year old Nosler Partition lol. In his hands, every single bullet is an animal harvested and in the freezer.

  • @maguslascivious4980
    @maguslascivious4980 Год назад +16

    Creedmor is still EVERYwhere.
    I feel like this is gonna be a love letter to 6.5 prc or something... which I can't find anywhere...

    • @riverwalker2173
      @riverwalker2173 Месяц назад

      I can't find a box of PRC ammo under $50. Too expensive!

    • @maguslascivious4980
      @maguslascivious4980 Месяц назад

      @@riverwalker2173 most 'non standard' short or long action rounds are 40-60 a box around here for decent ammo.
      that said, since this comment I can find 6.5 prc and 300 prc.. I can't find 7 prc..
      the problem with hunter fudds is they rarely take into consideration the popularity of things that fit in a magazine.. specially an AR platform magazine and Creedmoor does just that.

  • @robertkb64
    @robertkb64 Год назад +5

    Thanks for rubbing it in. The only rifle I’ve ever regretted selling was in 6.5 Swiss - it was far more accurate than I was at the time, so I figured it’d be better in the hands of someone who could use it.

  • @LRock-
    @LRock- Год назад +21

    6.5 Creemore has it's place in a tool box. Its a versatile cartridge for smaller game and its great for target shooting. I personally am a fan of 30-06 and 308, as I usually hunt deer and moose.

    • @tommykawasaki9676
      @tommykawasaki9676 Год назад +3

      I agree fully.
      Hard to beat the time honored classics !

    • @leeeng478
      @leeeng478 11 месяцев назад +1

      I think the Creedmoor is legally a huge alternative around the globe where military cartridges like the 308 have now been banned for civilian use. It is smart but scary! So now Hornady wants you to buy a weapon that is inferior at all levels for military use or protection. So in America we tend to love are military cartridges they are durable, versatile and accurate. Even canada who runs the F1 Class competition have changed the rules to favor the 6.5 in 1,000 yard competition by banning any 308 cartridge above 155. That is a killer when the 175's are excellent for 1,000 yard competition.

  • @chadbutler3277
    @chadbutler3277 Год назад +7

    Really Ron we are living in "the good old days" The selection and quality and options have never been better. Availability of some things is a challenge and there has always been good and really cool stuff but information, tools, components, and variety have never been better! Sometimes I want one of everything and two or three of some of them. Love the Creedmoor too!

  • @whiskeytango9769
    @whiskeytango9769 Год назад +4

    I use the creedmoor for deer and pigs. It never fails to drop them when I do my part.

  • @MegaSloth
    @MegaSloth Год назад +19

    Ron, I absolutely love your channel. I feel like I'm hanging out with my cool Uncle Ron who loves guns and hunting. Please never stop making videos.

    • @ARTENSASS
      @ARTENSASS Год назад

      Story time with Ron at the end of a range day sitting around a camp fire would be really awesome!

  • @richardbriscoe8563
    @richardbriscoe8563 Год назад +223

    The 6.5 Swede’s enemy is the industry’s refusal to make 6.5x55 +P ammo for use in modern actions. They continue to manufacture low pressure ammo for the few remaining old actions.

    • @calebshipley4448
      @calebshipley4448 Год назад +43

      I wouldn't say "few" remaining old actions. There are an absolute ton of M96 and M38 rifles on the surplus market. I'm sure the ammo manufacturers don't want a hot round ending up in one of those.

    • @barrymantei7795
      @barrymantei7795 Год назад +10

      The Hornady SST ammo is loaded a lot hotter than other 6.5×55 factory ammo.

    • @BrassJeep
      @BrassJeep Год назад +13

      You are correct with American made ammo, but European ammo you purchase 6.5x55 SE which is a higher pressure Swede and sold in the states. Although it is still below 60,000psi I believe.

    • @bobsmith2815
      @bobsmith2815 Год назад +9

      Thoroughly agree about the Swede having lots of unused potential

    • @HondoTrailside
      @HondoTrailside Год назад +4

      And those still kill like the black death, should one not handload. Seyfried wrote some articles on it, and said his old school 6.5x54 was good for everything other than Grizzly. This from a guy who was a Keith disciple.

  • @louiskiser9989
    @louiskiser9989 Год назад +1

    My very first was a 7 mm Magnum,still have and Love it,76 and still love it

  • @thomaskotch4770
    @thomaskotch4770 11 месяцев назад +1

    I love my 6.5 CM. Does t.he trick in deer season here

  • @jmfa57
    @jmfa57 Год назад +19

    I've three rifles in 6.5x55, and it is hands down my favorite cartridge, with 7x57 being a close second. I also have three rifles in 7x57. They are both mild but effective and fun as heck to shoot. I shoot lots of other rifle cartridges too, from 5.56 through .458 WinMag and lots of stuff in between, but these two are my particular favorites. Oh, yeah, I reload, otherwise I wouldn't be shooting quite a few of my rifles.

  • @TheGrizzLee87
    @TheGrizzLee87 Год назад +4

    6.5 creedmoor will be here forever 😎 yes there are other options super options to be precise but you should shoot what you want and dont let other people tell you whats good and what not ✌️ have fun shoot and do it every day you can
    Mr.Spomer keep up the great work

  • @neilis2405
    @neilis2405 Год назад +22

    I've got one 6.5 Creedmoor (a Savage Axis) just because I got it at a really good deal, but honestly for real hunting use I'm unlikely to move away from my 7mm-08. Its my go to and what I've killed by far the most game with. I will occasionally use a muzzleloader and if I ever get to hunt in straight-wall only state I'll likely pickup a .350 Legend, but for general use 7mm-08 just works for me.

    • @clintonlayne9253
      @clintonlayne9253 Год назад +1

      Those really good deals gets your attention. I bought a Thompson Center bolt action cheap but it's a Shooter and a T.C. encore barrel both in 6.5 CM . Good Luck for this upcoming Deer Season.

    • @MountainFisher
      @MountainFisher Год назад +1

      I've been using the .308/7.62 NATO since the Army and can't get away from it. Saved my brother from a charging bear he couldn't hit-to-kill with his .44 Magnum.
      I shot a 7mm-08 and was impressed with its flat shooting ability. I shot silhouettes with it one day out to 500 meters and it was good at it.

    • @hueysegura6956
      @hueysegura6956 Год назад +5

      I have shot 3006 and 308 for 40 years. All the newer calibers are good performers but I have enough rifles already.

    • @01nmuskier
      @01nmuskier Год назад +1

      7mm-08 is a beautiful cartridge. I would have bought one if I could find ammo.

    • @MountainFisher
      @MountainFisher Год назад

      @@01nmuskier It is kind of a reloader's cartridge anymore, but you can find ammo for it online.

  • @CB-wv3zy
    @CB-wv3zy Год назад +1

    7mm08 with 139 grain bullets, gives the range and energy adequate for elk. Awesome for long range target shooting too. Factory ammo is still around and for re-loaders the 7mm08 is a match made in heaven. 308 brass and 7mm bullets... just like peanut butter and jelly. Never understood the how and why the 6.5 creedmore made such a buzz. The 7mm08 and the 260 Remington have been around for decades. I guess some find the "6.5" anything a sexy name. huh... marketing smoke and mirrors!

  • @cvabuck5489
    @cvabuck5489 Год назад +1

    You're spot on with the comment about the Grendel. I stepped up from .30-30 to .270 as my whitetail round of choice about ten years ago and never looked back. But, when it comes to late season here in Virginia where you can tag two a day, once the herds start grouping back up post-rut I can shoulder and multi-target running deer at 250 yards with a semi-auto Grendel and never lose a sight picture. My Grendel shoots flatter than my 9mm PCC with barely any recoil.

  • @dougkahler7152
    @dougkahler7152 Год назад +13

    Ron don’t forget the 25-06 is a great deer hunting round up to and including Elk with the great bullets of today. And it is better than a need more at all practical hunting ranges. Screw on a 1/7 twist barrel and use the 130 to 135 grain high bc bullets now being produced it leaves the need more in the dust period.

    • @lancewalker6067
      @lancewalker6067 Год назад

      Oooo baby, would that be sweet!

    • @Nick-sx6jm
      @Nick-sx6jm Год назад

      I have a 257 wby and its a great deer gun but I would never take it on an elk hunt.

    • @dougkahler7152
      @dougkahler7152 Год назад

      @@Nick-sx6jm your not using the right bullets then. A good bonded bullet or all copper bullet like a 115 TSX and it’ll take elk without question! But it’s would be a backup for me when I own all the great Elk calibers including a 300 rum and several 338 win mags. My Uncle used a 25-06 extensively on elk for 40 years with a 120 grain rem core lock bullet and brought home more Elk with it than most 10 people will get in a lifetime!

    • @Nick-sx6jm
      @Nick-sx6jm Год назад

      @dougkahler7152 I just would never use it for elk when there are so many better options out there. Also, dont like copper bullets at all. Wanted to like them and tried them in 257wby, 340wby, and 7x61. Ended up losing a bear and nearly losing a few deer because of poor performance even with perfect shot placement.

  • @papaswoodshop4873
    @papaswoodshop4873 Год назад +6

    I reload and shoot 14 different cartridges. 6.5 creedmoor is just 1 of them. I don't understand why anyone hates any cartridge. No one is forcing you to buy anything you don't want. Learn to enjoy all of them.

    • @peterhert9350
      @peterhert9350 Год назад

      I do nearly the same (13 Cartridges). Despite I shoot 6,5x47. But think to buy 6,5 cm , when no time to reload.

  • @stefanocappella9612
    @stefanocappella9612 Год назад +14

    Good evening from alberta canada 🇨🇦 love every episode you do ron. Keep up the fantastic work.

  • @GraveyarDiscipl
    @GraveyarDiscipl Год назад +20

    I prefer the 7mm-08 over the 6.5 Creedmoor for a hunting cartridge. For plinking /target stuff the creed is great. It's good for hunting too, I've used it on deer but I still prefer the 7mm-08

    • @noahway13
      @noahway13 Год назад +1

      Why?

    • @jamessaunders7762
      @jamessaunders7762 9 месяцев назад +1

      Take a look at the ballistic comparison. More energy and flatter in same size bullets. Have 2 7mm-08s wanted to get a new rifle was looking at 6.5 and realized I already had two rifles better in that size.

  • @allanbaker659
    @allanbaker659 Год назад +1

    hey Ron, I agree with you, and don't hate the 6.5 creed. I just wish that you would always enter the caveat that if you handload, the 6.5swede, 260 rem etc will outperform the creed. good cartridge but it's not magic and the oldies are still phenomenal cartridges. the swede claim to fame came using long heavy bullets! 160 gr I believe.

  • @bobgordon1754
    @bobgordon1754 Год назад +30

    I have killed 🦌 with everything from the .300 weatherby down to the.223. I don't know why but I've always felt underguned with the .243 even though it always worked very well. After about four seasons with the 6.5 I have found it to be the Goldilock cartridge for me. It's just right. Too many people expect too much from a cartridge but like Jack O Conner said. "All any cartridge does is burn powder and launch bullet's.
    .

    • @supergreatairgunreviews
      @supergreatairgunreviews Год назад +1

      The 6.5 Creedmoor has always reminded me of the .243 Winchester just a little bigger, both shoot fast and flat. But people act like .243 is youth/womens cartridge and 6.5 is the right hand of God haha

    • @johnshields9110
      @johnshields9110 Год назад

      I respect high quality information, especially from people who have experience from the field. I too am a 300 Mag guy, but 243 worked every time I did my part. Glad to hear about your 6.5 results, as I bought one thinking it was all my daughter could handle recoil wise, and it would be 'just enough' as she thought she was moving to aemi remote Canada at one point (she'd had to give her S&W and 30 Carbine up). The 6.5 Swede penterates game well, and O'Conner counted on the 270 with 150 gr bullets to deal with the odd Grizzly, if necessary. I could use less kick in my target sessions these days, but I bought the 6.5 for the reason stated. I hope the 147 grs do the job with deep penetration, if needed, and you stating that they do. Thanks.

    • @bobgordon1754
      @bobgordon1754 Год назад

      @@johnshields9110 many thanks 🙏 for your reply.

    • @bobgordon1754
      @bobgordon1754 Год назад

      @@supergreatairgunreviews Thanks for the reply. 😀

  • @OntarioBearHunter
    @OntarioBearHunter Год назад +4

    I like the 6.5 but haven't got one because I already have 308.. 243..270.. it doesn't offer me what I don't already have. But as a one and done cartridge around here I recommend it.

  • @Kross8761
    @Kross8761 Год назад +26

    One specific thing that helps the 6.5 creedmoor hang in there pretty well is the fact that it's optimized for AR10/SR25 constraints. The AR10 "can" be chambered in larger cartridges like the WSM's but few companies do it, and even fewer do it well, however nearly every company that makes an AR10 offers it in 6.5 creedmoor (and some are starting to offer 6creedmoor more often too)
    Personally my favorite AR10 cartridge is the 7mm-08, im a big fan of 7mm as a bullet diameter just for a little more frontal area compared to a 6.5 and you can still load excellent high BC bullets and get respectable velocities and carry a good amount of energy a long way.
    To me it's the perfect goldilocks cartridge specifically for the AR10: it can be loaded almost as heavy as a .308 for some real "oomph" and still offers excellent BC's similar to the 6.5 creedmoor. At 500yds with my 7mm-08 I've still got ample velocity for good expansion and have just barely dropped under 1500ft/lbs with a 162gr ELD-X, and if i want to shoot a match the 162gr ELD-M will stay supersonic well past 1000yds at my velocities.
    For a long time i didn't really know much at all about ballistics and bullet diameters and BC's, and i thought the .308 was the end-all be-all. Then as i started to get into the weeds and learn more about "long action vs short" and learned more about BC's and what velocities were realistic with certain cartridge and bullet combinations and what rifles had proper twist rates for certain bullets and much much more i ended up deciding on 7mm as my preferred bullet diameter for a LOT of things, and it has a lot going for it.
    It's big enough to hunt basically any animal in north america ethically, and at proper velocities its bullet weights are going to be carrying enough "energy" for clean hunting kills on basically anything in north america. 7mm bullets sit in a good spot for their bullet weight/shape to BC ratio, and most 7mm bullets aren't prohibitively heavy or long enough to severely impact smart case designs. Look at 7mm PRC VS 300PRC. if you compare BC and velocity on paper the 7 absolutely smokes the 300 (the 300 will carry more energy for a very long distance due to sheer weight, that's a fact) but the 7PRC launches a bullet with a higher BC than the 300 and does it faster AND does it with noticeably less recoil because it's a lighter bullet being pushed by less powder. Ballistically the 7PRC is truly incredible: great ballistic trajectory, lower recoil than a lot of other high performance long range cartridges, excellent amount of energy for clean and ethical kills on large game at any "reasonable" range, and not prohibitively heavy or expensive.
    That's why, for my two "full power" rifles I i ended up going with 7mm-08 in an AR10 and a 7PRC in a bolt action, and i did not start out thinking i was going to care about 7mm's at ALL.
    And 6.5 creedmoor and 6.5PRC are also excellent cartridges (i absolutely dont mean this to say it's for women or weak people, but it might sound like it) my younger sister shoots a 6.5 creedmoor and she absolutely hammers deer with it, she loves that rifle and if i needed to use it for hunting I'd feel very well equipped to hunt all but the absolute biggest game in North America. If i had a bull moose or a boar grizzly charging me would i want something bigger? Yeah I'd want a howitzer, but for hunting any animal im likely to hunt in any location the 6.5 creedmoor would probably get the job done fine.

    • @johnnash5118
      @johnnash5118 Год назад

      You missed Sectional Density’s place in hunting bullets.

    • @Kross8761
      @Kross8761 Год назад +2

      @@johnnash5118 oh yeah, there's a lot that i didn't specifically mention. The list of things I didn't even know I didn't know could be very long. I'll also confess that sectional density isn't something I really understand in depth, and (for the most part) isn't something I worry about too much because I tend to favor long high BC bullets that tend to also have higher sectional densities. And material can skew what sectional density actually means because a bullet with a lower SD can penetrate more depending on construction (example: a TTSX with a lower SD than an ELD-X will still penetrate further because the TTSX is solid copper and holds together basically perfectly)

    • @Gkvello22
      @Gkvello22 Год назад +1

      Buddy that was one of the most informative comments I’ve ever read. You about sold me on a 7mm rifle that i don’t even need, bravo

    • @Kross8761
      @Kross8761 Год назад +1

      @@Gkvello22 .30 cals will be better for big animals like moose and large bears, and in a couple states the minimum bullet diameter that is legal to hunt bison is .30 cal, but as far as having enough "energy" and (slightly more important to me) enough velocity to expand properly and deliver that energy on target the bigger 7's have plenty of both both at any reasonable distance.
      I still think .30's have their place, for pure payload on target I'd still take a 300PRC or a 300 Norma Magnum, but for a great mix of ballistic efficiency and "power" it's pretty hard to beat a well-designed 7mm

    • @Gkvello22
      @Gkvello22 Год назад

      @@Kross8761 i live in a state where it must be bigger than .22x so i certainly understand the logic. Sadly our “big game” is black bear and i don’t even hunt (yet) so if i were to hunt it would be deer. I appreciate your information

  • @up_troys_bucket4377
    @up_troys_bucket4377 Год назад +1

    I'm a 6mm guy at heart, so it works perfectly for me. I've run a .243 for a long time and as a dedicated hunting rifle that's able to run 55 Grain Nosler Ballistic Tips right up to 100 grain bonded bullets for bigger game. I've never felt like i needed anything else here in Eastern Australia. The only thing i ever felt i was missing was a dedicated high BC target round because i dont handload.
    Now i don't have to worry anymore, i have the 6.5 CM for target and the .243 for hunting. 6mm all round gets the job done.

  • @valsahr5836
    @valsahr5836 Год назад +33

    The fact that so many 6.5mm cartridges are coming out and being developed is a testament to the CM. What an amazingly well rounded cartridge.

    • @chippyjohn1
      @chippyjohn1 Год назад +1

      Nothing to do with CM. It started with the 6.5X55, the best 6.5mm made.

    • @valsahr5836
      @valsahr5836 Год назад +3

      @@chippyjohn1 I would agree that the Swede is a great cartridge, but the 6.5 interest didn’t really develop in earnest until the CM….

    • @chippyjohn1
      @chippyjohn1 Год назад +1

      @@valsahr5836 Only country it didn't was the US. Most countries recognised it's perfection. The Swede is still better.

    • @valsahr5836
      @valsahr5836 Год назад +2

      @@chippyjohn1 well, in America the Swede was, and still is,relatively obscure.
      Better? That’s a bold statement. All subjective and directly related to an individual’s situation. In the USA, unless you reload, I would disagree with better.

    • @chippyjohn1
      @chippyjohn1 Год назад +1

      @@valsahr5836 You yanks think everything you do is better. 6.5X55 all the way. Just consider it was designed over 130 years ago, it took the US over 100 years to catch up and recognise the efficiency of 6.5mm. Nato wanted to go 6.5mm but because of the US they did not. Anyone that shoots larger volumes reload, avid hunters and target shooters don't buy factory ammunition.

  • @ronaldroehrick4872
    @ronaldroehrick4872 Год назад +61

    When the 6.5 by 55 Swedish is hand-loaded it actually outperforms the 6.5 Creedmore in modern bolt action rifles.

    • @_DeFiNiTeLy_Not_BrAd_
      @_DeFiNiTeLy_Not_BrAd_ Год назад +6

      So does the .260 with a faster twist barrel

    • @anthonykaiser974
      @anthonykaiser974 Год назад +2

      ...and it's getting close to 6.5-284 in Ackley form.

    • @bryanbiltoft8141
      @bryanbiltoft8141 Год назад +2

      *CREEDMOOR*

    • @mattc5647
      @mattc5647 Год назад +9

      The outperformance is minimal and offers no real word advantage. If you handload and love your 6.5×55 you already own, keep that and love it, but if you are buying a new rifle in the US 6.5 creedmoor makes more sense. Both are great cartridges though.

    • @anthonykaiser974
      @anthonykaiser974 Год назад

      @@mattc5647 define minimal. Vihtavuori loads gain 100 fps between standard "Swedish Mauser" and SE/SKAN specifications, and CIP standard loads are hotter than SAAMI to start with, probably 50-100 fps.

  • @user-vv8oj6vl8w
    @user-vv8oj6vl8w Год назад +4

    The guys culling hogs in Texas really did push the popularity of the 6.5 grendel. With a copper bullet it will punch through 180 lbs+ pigs at 200 yards. It is an amazing little cartridge…even out of a 16” barrel.
    The creedmoor is a jack of all trades…a master of none but still better than a master of one. In the same camp as the 308…you know…just better. ;)

  • @galenhisler396
    @galenhisler396 Год назад +14

    I'll stick to my 270 . Great show 🤠

  • @musicordeon3790
    @musicordeon3790 Год назад +1

    Been shootimg the 6.5CM for about 3 years now. Man, was i impressed the first outing with it. Came from a .308 that i'd been hunting with for the last 25 years. It's tried and true but never achieved the less than 1/2 MOA groups at 100yrds with it like i do now with the 6.5. I'll keep using it for many years to come.

  • @jayhemfindsyou
    @jayhemfindsyou Год назад +8

    Perfect round for deer hunting and long range pest hunting alike. I used to use a .243Win or 7mm-08 but the ammo for the CM is easier to find usually.

  • @gregggiddens
    @gregggiddens Год назад +25

    No way, I love the 6.5 Creedmoor. It does everything you need it to, great gun for learning if you’re new to shooting also. I actually prefer it over the 308

    • @lennyj2080
      @lennyj2080 Год назад +4

      I am fine with my 6.5 Savage Model 10 BA Stealth with an MDT chassis. It is extremely accurate out to the very end of the 1,000 yard range I have on my land. It kills everything I have shot out to 815 yards including elk.

  • @DB-iu8yl
    @DB-iu8yl Год назад +9

    Great information Ron. As for I’ll keep my 30-30 and 308. And when my 8 year old outgrows his Grendel he’ll be getting a 7mm-08 simply bc it’s ballistics within my self determined ethical hunting distance is virtually identical to the creedmore but has a few heavier bullet selections.

    • @jfess1911
      @jfess1911 Год назад +5

      The 7mm-08 is a good, balanced cartridge. The 6.5 Creedmoor was designed as a 1000 yard target cartridge, so it mainly gains on the 7mm-08 at very long ranges.

  • @lyndonfisher1974
    @lyndonfisher1974 Год назад +104

    Let's hear it for the 6.5x55 Swede!!!

  • @freedomlover425
    @freedomlover425 Год назад +1

    So refreshing to click on a Ron Spomer video and actually get a Ron Spomer video.

  • @donscheid97
    @donscheid97 Год назад +4

    Something that I have not seen mentioned anywhere yet (hint, hint), is the advancement in technologies of firearm, and powder, bullets design, which has made many of these new cartridges possible and improved performance of older cartridges. Most notable for hunting is the newer bullets, lead core still works and has been improved but it is no longer the champion it once was. Long range shooters will be more interested in powder and both are happy with new firearms available. I have the 6mm Rem and love it, so not getting rid of it.

  • @lylelengyel
    @lylelengyel Год назад +28

    I did a lot of research trying to decide on a cartridge for my first rifle, which I want to use primarily for hunting pigs out here in California. I decided on 6.5 PRC. If I lived in a state which allowed suppressors, I'd probably go with 6.8 Western.

    • @42N8_1
      @42N8_1 Год назад +8

      6.8 western was DOA. Great concept, but it's done for several reasons.

    • @vikingsoftpaw
      @vikingsoftpaw Год назад +4

      ​@@42N8_16.8 western was further undercut by several gun makers making .270 Win with fast twist Barrels.

    • @lylelengyel
      @lylelengyel Год назад

      @@42N8_1 it's fine if you reload. There's great BC bullets in that caliber and it can put more energy downrange than a lot of similar cartridges. There's a reason the US military is going with something close to it.

    • @claytonbruner1808
      @claytonbruner1808 Год назад +2

      @@42N8_1 I agree. You bought a caliber that will be supported for a long time to come. I'm taking a 6.5PRC to South Africa next year to see how it performs.

    • @soreloser6018
      @soreloser6018 Год назад +1

      ​@@42N8_1I kind of want to get a rifle in 6.8 western just so I can complain about ammo when I'm older, like next week. It's a good cartridge but it did fall flat.

  • @raywells2858
    @raywells2858 Год назад +19

    I love my 6.5 Grendel for deer or smaller due to its lighter recoil and the fact it fits a AR Magazine. The 6.5 CM never impressed me enough to abandon my .308 Win when I need something with a little more authority down range.

    • @josh2711
      @josh2711 Год назад +6

      I think when you start with 308, and you’re only planning on hunting with it, then 6.5c seems like a waste of time. But I started with 6.5c and wanted to shoot 308 as a cheap alt… boy was I disappointed by M80. The good 308 ammo is just as pricy as 6.5c, but 6.5c is cutting through wind so much more efficiently.

    • @jasonmartin7364
      @jasonmartin7364 Год назад +3

      The further distance/yards the xtra stopping power decreases on .308
      We’re they swap with 6.5 shining out to 800yds and beyond. I do own Both. In bolt and AR platform. simply no comparison 800 and further
      It’s not even a comparison. Any ballistic app will show this. As stated love both but L.R matches I only take ONE. 6.5CM with 153 A-tip at 2822 FPS. Not a typo on velocity either obtainable with no psi sighs
      All in the powder. 6.5 still sells more in (rifle variety) than any other caliber as of 4-6-23. And to think was once a HATTER!! Of said caliber. Lol. Good day.

    • @MrNiceKnife
      @MrNiceKnife Год назад

      @@jasonmartin73642800? What powder? Compressed? That’s crazy

    • @Miohunter444
      @Miohunter444 Год назад +1

      Same here, love my Grendel!!

    • @jfess1911
      @jfess1911 Год назад +2

      The 6.5 Creedmoor was designed as a 1000yard target cartridge, so the emphasis was placed on long range accuracy. Part of the reason it became so popular was that its chamber design tends to produce good accuracy in typical production rifles. Suddenly a lot of shooters were able to consistently hit targets that they had always missed before. That, combined with lower recoil than a 308, is largely why it became so popular.
      The 6.5 Grendel is an excellent cartridge for deer. Its main issue is that some handloaders try to hotrod it to the point where AR15 bolt life becomes an issue.

  • @Ben-d9n1r
    @Ben-d9n1r Год назад +4

    A lot of NRL shooters are coming around full circle and going back to the 6.5 Creedmoor. Accurate, fast or slow velocities, very low recoil for follow up shots, cheap, easily handles wind for the relevant distances, and just clears the power factor.

    • @charlesbukowski9836
      @charlesbukowski9836 Год назад +1

      it really is a perfect balanced cartridge ... look at it all around,,, I was looking at 7WSM but why? ill never shoot to 1500 in REALITY 1000 is max even then 700/800 is the practical range of these mid tier calibers for us mortals using these wonder loads

  • @mattgarner7549
    @mattgarner7549 8 месяцев назад +1

    Ron you need to look at the 7 SPRC or PRCW depending on who you talk to but it’s the same cartridge. It’s the 6.5 prc case necked up to 7mm (.284) and man it’s a monster for its size. I get just under 3100 pushing a 175 Berger elite out of it Eric cortina and a few others are now using it in F Class shooting just because it’s that good of a crossover There will be factory headstamoes brass soon if not already being run for it just like the 22 Creedmoor

  • @JohnnyRebKy
    @JohnnyRebKy Год назад +1

    I like chamberings i can always find ammo for at local small town stores. So i stick with traditional old school rounds. Lots of stuff looks good on paper but i need ammo i can find and afford.

  • @jefferytillis8309
    @jefferytillis8309 Год назад +8

    I don't think the Creedmor is going anywhere. The only thing that really slowed it down was the big ammo shortage and the manufacturers seeming to ignore anything that wasn't a NATO cartridge. Even today it seems that every new rifle released always starts with the 308 and the 6.5 Creedmor being the first two options offered. The new larger magnum type cartridges have their place, but most woods hunters have realized they don't need the extra recoil and expense. I still have my 260 Rem and 6.5x55 as well. Never felt under-gunned with either in the whitetail woods. Love the 7mm-08 too. And the 270, 25-06, 280 rem and so on and so on.

  • @longrangekarl
    @longrangekarl Год назад +17

    6.5x55 swed is absolutly amazing and the 260 rem does everything that 6.5 creedmoor can do but better

  • @curtisdavis9812
    @curtisdavis9812 Год назад +4

    I was surprised that I did not see the 7mm08 on the list. Great cartridge, right there with it. Just came out a little early for its time.

    • @jasminebebe3455
      @jasminebebe3455 Год назад

      A great option but i hardly ever see any barrels offered in that caliber for semi auto rifles. After all this is what makes the creed tick.

  • @brucejohnson1264
    @brucejohnson1264 11 месяцев назад +1

    Ron likes to talk about all kinds of crazy cartridges, but 99 percent of them can be eliminated from consideration by simply going to your local gun shop and looking at what ammo is available. If there is none on the shelf, you may as well eliminate it from consideration. The smart choice is going to be a caliber that has significant ammo in stock, probably 308, 30-06, 270, 243 etc.

  • @bradleyanderson4315
    @bradleyanderson4315 2 месяца назад +1

    Go to any Academy Sports and check availability and prices of the on the shelf ammo.

  • @viktormogilin307
    @viktormogilin307 Год назад +5

    Hi Ron, G'day from Aus., spot on, ADF at 17, started reloading after rookies, loved going to the range (military & civilian) & talking with the older diggers (especially the reloaders), love the science of creating your own (some say rolling you're own) with what's avail., to increase performance be it velocity, energy, trajectory, etc., the 7mm Mauser & 6.5mm Swede by far the most efficient cartridges of the time & to this day, with same pressures, modern powders, same twist rate & bullet weight & barrel lenght will out do any modern equivalents, this is comparing in bolt actions & single shots for comparing perfomance not AR platforms where I think the 6.5 excells, I prefer the 6.5 Swede to the .243 Win due to heavier projectiles & faster twist rate, they all do the job within their limits, bucket list, the 6.5 grendel is on it, small action light outfit for goats in rough country, walk in walk out, I should've followed my passion, man after my iwn heart, keep them vids comin', wan't to set up for reloading again after movin' a few times, always a pleasure to listen to & keep you're bestie 4 legged next to ya, wouldn't live without one 🍻😎😂
    Keep the wind in you face, the 🌅 to your back & your powder dry, old soldiers never die, they just go over the hill, see you on the next one or the next light/life
    👍😎😘
    Oh' home on the range 😂

  • @jonathanrogers9961
    @jonathanrogers9961 Год назад +26

    I suspect there will be a rise and fall with just about every cartridge given enough time. With that said, going to Cabelas and looking at the ammo shelves, there is more 6.5 Creedmoor than about anything else. Lots of offerings, all well stocked. It seems to be the current predominant option.

    • @bobjohnson1633
      @bobjohnson1633 Год назад +14

      I don't see a fall of the 30-30 until we have laser guns

    • @jonathanrogers9961
      @jonathanrogers9961 Год назад +5

      @@bobjohnson1633 I am seeing fall off in many areas. Look at what NEW guns are coming out and what their chambering options are. or even current offerings from modern manufacturers. Look at what is selling. There are plenty of good 30-30 and many other rifles out there, already owned. And they will keep doing a fine job. But when people are looking to buy a NEW rifle, well they are choosing other things.

    • @danav3387
      @danav3387 Год назад +1

      ​@@bobjohnson1633They are a great choice, I have one. I got it from my dad, my Grand father hunted with one and was quite successful. I also have a 30-30.

    • @Nick-sx6jm
      @Nick-sx6jm Год назад

      @@bobjohnson1633 Dont know anyone who still hunts or even has a 30-30 anymore.

    • @6.8SuperDutyDriver
      @6.8SuperDutyDriver Год назад +3

      @@Nick-sx6jm, 30-30 is still very popular in my area. With the exception of fields, most deer hunting is done under 100 yards. 30-30 works great in those conditions.

  • @CorwinBos
    @CorwinBos Год назад +5

    I dont think it will ever go away. Its a well designed cartridge thats accurate, effective on medium game, easy on the shoulder, and pretty easy to reload.

    • @SoloRenegade
      @SoloRenegade Год назад

      the .308 wasn't going away, and so the 6.5 isn't going away.

    • @CorwinBos
      @CorwinBos Год назад +2

      @@SoloRenegade My 308s still get a lot of action for shooting steel and hunting, but my 6mm guns are much easier to shoot at longer ranges. The 308 is also a lot cheaper to shoot.

    • @SoloRenegade
      @SoloRenegade Год назад +1

      @@CorwinBos exactly, people aren't going to stop shooting their guns just because some self-important nobody claims it's "done". .308 is still military issue and cheap as a result. And as long as .308 guns exist in quantity, 6.5 crdmr will be popular as a drop-in replacement. I have both .308 and 6.5crdmr guns for this exact reason. And what need do I have to shoot beyond 1200m anyways?

    • @CorwinBos
      @CorwinBos Год назад +1

      @@SoloRenegade
      I agree 100%. M80 ball is great cheap blaster ammo, whether you bought it or loaded it yourself. And thats something that the Creedmoors will never be able to beat largely because there isnt such a thing as a 6.5mm FMJBT bullet thats cheap. Ive taken my 308 to a 1000, 6 CM to 1200. If I need to go longer, thats what my 300 PRC is for :)

    • @SoloRenegade
      @SoloRenegade Год назад

      @@CorwinBos "largely because there isnt such a thing as a 6.5mm FMJBT bullet thats cheap."
      unless the military decides to use it at some point.
      " Ive taken my 308 to a 1000, 6 CM to 1200. If I need to go longer, thats what my 300 PRC is for :)"
      exactly, we choose something larger if we want to go further. but larger is more expensive, less ammo, and heavier, for performance that is rarely needed.

  • @chadcrady1440
    @chadcrady1440 10 месяцев назад

    Great caliber. Bought it for my girls for Whitetail and couldn't be more impressed with its performance.

  • @beauneo
    @beauneo 10 месяцев назад +1

    My Dad had a rule about his hunting rifles. He’d travelled once several states for a moose hunt with friends. Along the way his car got broken into and they made off with the bag that had his ammo. Because he was using a 30/06 he could go to any gun store and get more. They weren’t his hand loads but he knew how various factory loads worked in his gun. He grabbed some and went hunting. Got his moose. If he’d had some “superior” cartridge his hunt might have been over before it started. Those exotic cartridges are great in a theoretical world. Sometimes stuff happens and being able to grab some ammo at Walmart is a godsend. 6.5 CM isn’t going anywhere anytime soon.

  • @scottrobinson3281
    @scottrobinson3281 Год назад +13

    The 6.5 CM is wildly popular in South Africa, particularly the Howa 1500, for plains hunting and long range competitions.

    • @frosty0419
      @frosty0419 6 месяцев назад

      Idk. In Zimbabwe they love their 7.62. .338 and larger for tough dangerous game.

    • @scottrobinson3281
      @scottrobinson3281 6 месяцев назад +1

      @@frosty0419 The .338 does not have a very big following in Southern Africa. The most popular calibre in SA is the .30-06 followed closely by the .308Win, the .270Win and the .243Win for plains and general hunting. The 9,3x62 and .375H&H are at the top for medium/heavy calibres.

    • @frosty0419
      @frosty0419 6 месяцев назад

      @@scottrobinson3281 your right. I meant to say .375. That’s what we have. I have a total brain seizure.

  • @Deerhunterjs
    @Deerhunterjs Год назад +17

    I love my Creedmoor, but I'd also love to see a video about the 6.8 western compared to the Creedmoor. Pros and cons of each.

    • @stanleysanders9099
      @stanleysanders9099 Год назад +2

      The western beats it

    • @lrac7751
      @lrac7751 Год назад +8

      The animal you’re after probably won’t know the difference, but your shoulder certainly will

    • @jaydunbar7538
      @jaydunbar7538 Год назад +5

      6.8 is a modern high efficiency cartridge same as the creedmoor, it’s just a bit bigger in every way including the recoil. So you just have to ask yourself what is right for you and the ranges you hunt, plenty of new cartridges out that are all essentially doing the same thing just in slightly different sizes leaving you to pick the range and recoil balance that’s right for you. All of them are great options, I want a 6.8 because I use my larger rifles primarily for hunting and I don’t mind a bit of recoil. Wife also has a 6.5 creedmoor so i already have one under my care lol

    • @Deerhunterjs
      @Deerhunterjs Год назад

      I use my 6.5 for white tail and smaller game. I'm looking at a 6.8 because I can and I want a good bear rifle in the woods, that's different from what everyone else in my family has. I'm also curious about it's abilities in Africa and South America for hunting.

    • @actionjksn
      @actionjksn Год назад

      The creedmoor will have lower recoil. But if you're okay with the Western recoil, it will definitely outperform the creedmoor for hunting game. It doesn't sound like it's all that hard to deal with the recoil from it though.

  • @Selkirk69
    @Selkirk69 Год назад +3

    The 6.5 is much ado about something that already existed. The 6.5 -08 A Square ( 260 Rem) does everything the CM does and is far cheaper. I neck down a .308, trim, load, and bullet I want, and viola, cheaper, just as accurate, just a fast. etc.

  • @ronalcorn7039
    @ronalcorn7039 11 месяцев назад

    Gotta appreciate where the 6.5 Creedmoor has opened the door to so many options now. None the less, this bad boy still dropping dears quite easily.

  • @warpspeednow
    @warpspeednow Год назад +1

    What about the 260 Remington? Easy to make case's out of 243's, plenty of 6.5 projectiles. Fits perfectly into a medium sized actions and is a very accurate cartridge. Just my opinion.

  • @FL-cd5xd
    @FL-cd5xd Год назад +3

    Keep in mind the MIL adopted the 6.5 for special types of weapons and it is likely that will contribute to it longevity too. How many brands of ammo companies have embraced the 6.5? If anything, it is going to substitute the 300 win mag for some people not wanting to deal w the recoil.

    • @Hydra70964
      @Hydra70964 Год назад

      There are rumors this has happened. These organizations will not provide updates on what they are currently utilizing.

  • @TheGDizzo
    @TheGDizzo Год назад +3

    Just picked up a Howa SuperLite in 6.5cm for my son. I'm shocked by how light it is, and Daddy's seriously contemplating getting himself one of these afterward as well. Waiting to see it's effect on a Muley first, before ditching the .308Win 1st. I'm liking the idea of it being easier on the shoulder, after having had arthro-scopic on my shooting side for a labral tear before.

    • @karls4777
      @karls4777 Год назад

      Switched from a .308 to 6.5cm about 5 years ago. Takes Idaho mules lovely.

    • @TheGDizzo
      @TheGDizzo Год назад

      Daddy finally got some time to finish sighting in that 6.5cm. That recoil is nice! You can handle that with or without the butt of the rifle firmly tucked into the shoulder pocket. Unfortunately there was some crosswind that day, so I didn't get to see just how impressive the groups CAN be, but still there were very respectable groups, even with the wind. I'm thinking this cartridge will lead to a lot of better shooters since it's less recoil, so there'll be less instance of people "punching the trigger" pre-flinching.

  • @Matt-zn4zp
    @Matt-zn4zp Год назад +144

    I see the rise but no fall yet. 6.5cm does well for me.

    • @aquadonkey.
      @aquadonkey. Год назад +5

      im just curious why chose 6.5 cm over 6.5 prc when ammo is basically the same price from what ive seen?

    • @Matt-zn4zp
      @Matt-zn4zp Год назад +6

      @@aquadonkey.good question. I bought my rifle during the pandemic and I could not find 6.5PRC anywhere. Obviously now looking back is easy but back then it wasn’t. I don’t mind what people shoot and many calibers have their time and place. I like my rig and is a tack driver, fun to shoot long range and can still put meat on the table when needed. Happy shooting!

    • @abefroman7393
      @abefroman7393 Год назад +16

      Couldn’t agree more. Sublime accuracy and gentle recoil has kept me in the game.

    • @locomike102
      @locomike102 Год назад +11

      @@aquadonkey. Lower recoil, availability, and for the average hunter, who shouldn't be taking shots past 400 yards, the PRC offers no benefit. The PRC is an awesome carriage but more isn't always better if we're being honest with ourselves about how we're going to use it.

    • @sinisterthoughts2896
      @sinisterthoughts2896 Год назад +4

      I wouldn't be surprised by a fall, but I feel it will fall from incredibly popular to just popular. It is too common, too produced and too supported to just go away overnight. I just think they are reaching peak market saturation.

  • @willg5013
    @willg5013 11 месяцев назад +1

    Marketing and timing play such a role in what chambers dominate and which ones fall flat. 6.5-284 and 7 SAUM both great cartridges and both are headed for obscurity. The 6.8 Western may also fall into the trap.

  • @daithi1966
    @daithi1966 10 месяцев назад +1

    I'm not a 6.5 Creedmoor hater, but if I were buying a hunting rifle for shooting longer ranges, or bigger game, or for long range target shooting then I'd go with the 7mm PRC.
    On the other hand, I'd probably go with the 6.5 CM if I was looking for a deer rifle that was accurate within the ranges that I actually hunt. It's really accurate and has less recoil than comparable cartridges. Yet, I'd also love to have an old school Winchester Model 70 in .270 Winchester that has the extra fine walnut stock. It was my dream rifle as a teenager.

  • @johnkizziah108
    @johnkizziah108 Год назад +4

    I was slow with the 6.5 hunted (back in the day) with a really pretty mod 70 in 264 had to have a 6.5 needmore. My thing with it is its very accurate and pretty easy on barrels which for those of us that shoot alot.

  • @philp411
    @philp411 Год назад +7

    It was amazing to watch the growth in popularity of the 6.5 Creedmoor. I cannot think of a cartridge that has become so “commonly accepted” in the last 40 years. I was surprised that you didn’t compare/comment on the 260 Remington (though it has all but fallen into obscurity).

    • @jasminebebe3455
      @jasminebebe3455 Год назад

      Harder to put a heavy bullet in a 260 and make it work in a semi auto magazine fed.

    • @philp411
      @philp411 Год назад

      @@jasminebebe3455 the same can be said for the myriad of other cartridges that were used in the video to compare/contrast vs the 6.5CM.

    • @jasminebebe3455
      @jasminebebe3455 Год назад

      @@philp411 Exactly....... this is the thing that makes the 6.5 special in it's own little way. There are crap loads of more powerful cartridges but basically none that fit in a 308 magazine with heavy for caliber bullets and is extremely commercially available. 260 came very close but just missed the mark by a hair. In a bolt gun where you can run a slightly longer overall length the 260 is probably ever so slightly superior..... but not in my AR10

  • @lukeywalsh
    @lukeywalsh Год назад +8

    Thank you for this video. Many good options out there. I had hopes 6 ARC would get more military contracts because that usually lowers the price.
    Will be tough to overthrow the 6.5CM when factoring: Energy on Target + Recoil Management + Barrel Life

  • @jasonf.4107
    @jasonf.4107 2 месяца назад

    Love my 6.5 Creedmoor - it’s a slim, trim Remington Mountain SS with a 3-9 Trijicon.

  • @KolyaNickD
    @KolyaNickD 9 месяцев назад +1

    Will the Rem 260 come back.?
    The aesthetics of the round looks so correct and perhaps deals with non-lead a little better.