5 Best Cartridges & Calibers for New Hunters
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- Опубликовано: 18 авг 2022
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22-250 is a great round I used it to kill many of deer
Nothing listed accomplishes what a 7-33NOSLER WILDCAT CAN EXAMPLE A 190GRN A-tip seated fits out of the powder column in the shorter fatter nosler case loaded into a AICS detachable magazine thar only has a id length of 3.760" from a 30" barrel the 7-33 nosler launches 190 grn bullets G1 BC .838 at 3,200fps This out does all of the cartridges on this video delivering 1000FPE @1 mile (1760 yards) fact,
did you mean 6mm ? instead of 6.5 creedmoor ?
I have a pinned response from a backfire account.. Is it a scam?
amigo subtitule en español
We have draw in youth hunts where I live and you should see what the dads bring out for their kids to shoot. 300 mags, 7 mags and all kinds of cannons just to shoot a white tail at no more than 200 yards max. I've seen them drop the gun when it goes off or flinch so bad that they miss by a mile. A .243 or a 22-250 is just about right for young people. Flame me all you want but theres no need in making a kid hunt with something thats gonna punish them.
200 yd Max you are spot on with those two choices. No need to ruin a new Hunter because of dad's ego in needing to have a big cartridge. I ruined my oldest boy for hunting by making him shoot a 30-06. It was just too darn big for him at the time. All because I was too cheap to go buy a new rifle.
Those are great choices. I would add a suppressed(if your state allows hunting with a suppressor)6.5 Grendel in a light bolt action. I have one for my "grandkids" to use, but I may claim it before they are old enough. Around 7 lbs, including the suppressor. The bare gun weighs 4 lb 10 ounces.
That's probably why back in the day, the .30-30 was a lot of people's first deer rifles.
Why would anyone "flame" that opinion? My first deer gun (6 or so) was a 30.06 and I know it made me flinch as a kid. Any time I shot a .270 or .243 I was more accurate.
A few years later on the other hand..
243
If someone doesn't have cash to burn I always suggest 308, 270, 30-06, 6.5 creedmoor, 7mm-08 in that order. If they end up really enjoying hunting and shooting, down the road you can open up to 280AI, 6.5PRC, 7 Rem Mag, etc. If you're just hunting white tails, 243 is also a great way to go.
I started out with the 30:06 back in '80 when I started deer hunting. When the ammo shortage hit, went with the .308 Winchester,....not a complaint about that cartridge either, can find it nearly everywhere in my neck of the woods, '06, can still be missing from the store shelves.
.243 win is a great deer cartridge. Necked down.308 . The 30/06 is still the best do all cartridge that is available everywhere
Why would a new hunter buy into an archaic platform?
One serious part you left out was the bullet selection for caliber. Which can regulate the recoil felt. The best all around is the 308. Hear me out. Its not the best at anything, but can do more than most at a low cost of ammo. New hunters can load a 110 grain round and get a deer, black bear. As they grow older they can step up the bullet size and hunt elk, moose. It truley is an all around cheap for cost hunting rifle.
Could not agree more, 6.5 prc has no business beating out 308
Also, cheap practice ammo!
@@brettbaker5599 And always in abundance in stock, even if its nato rounds.
@HorchataFan You mean with it's numbers on paper right? Cause new kid on the block has a LOT of catching up to do to reach the dominance that 308 has been dishing out for decades.
I completely agree. The newer stuff is definitely “better” on paper. But you can go from predator/small game to deer and antelope to black bear and sheep to dang elk and moose lol. In the same rifle.
My first rifle was a .270. My wife and daughters first were 7mm-08. Hard to beat the 7mm-08 for a first do all rifle. I think the .308 should have stayed in there too.
Yeah the 308 can shoot very flat with lightweight bullets, flatter than the 6.5 CM of the same weight to distances that a new hunter will likely shoot from
If you look at his charts in other videos, he lists the average 308 Winchester load as 202gr at 2491 fps. Using these numbers, I can see why he would throw it out for being too slow. A 150gr at 2800 fps would be a decent load for a beginner.
Me too...308 still most popular in Africa....@2750fps....no problems in shooting anything in Namibia. 308 tamed this country☺
the 6.5 mm and the 7 mm in 308 length cartridges both outperform the 308 Win in all respect, they have higher BC and SD, carry more energy down range, drift less in the wind and have deep penetration. The .30 cal is just not as efficient in flight, it is just physics.
@@chrisdaniel1339 true, but my rifle and bullets shoot the same speed as my buddy's 260. Will never go for any other option though. Cheers
You are one of the few channels that makes these types of videos based on experience and logic, rather than reading some ads or blog posts and assembling opinions on it so good on you for that.
This will be my first year hunting and I got a 270 WIN. Super happy with my pick!
Depends on the rifle and bullet weight. I let my 270 go. Didn't need it for what I shoot and it kicked too much for me. I probably could have solved the problem with a better butt pad. I never tried loading it down and I should have.
Great choice!! I have been shooting for about five decades now. I tried just about every caliber over the years up to the 300 Win Mag, and the 270 Win is still my favorite. The newer 6.5CM is almost changing my mind, but when it comes to hunting season, I always seem to go with old faithful 270.
I have actually had a fair few people ask me this before and my answer is always the same; Tikka T3X Lite with a Leupold 2.5-8*36 chambered in 308. The rifle will be accurate, affordable, unfussy with ammo and 100% reliable with feeding. The scope is rugged, has a dial up turret, has plenty of magnification for a beginner, and prevents the beginner trap of turning the magnification up way too high when shooting. The cartridge is super cheap to shoot and super easy on barrels, which is conducive to the single most important aspect for a beginner; easy to train with. Hornady produce Custom Lite ammo for it which produces just 13ftlbs of energy in a 7.5lb rifle, so you can practice with that all day without damaging your shoulder, wallet or barrel, yet when you want to step it up you can get some Nosler 168gr ABLR ammo or Hornady Precision Hunter and be absolutely lethal out to 500 yards (assuming of course you’ve done that valuable practice). The only other chambering that is nearly as good is the 6.5 Creedmoor, but if elk are on the menu the 308 still has the edge.
My wife is getting into hunting and we picked the 308. Less recoil than a 30-06, still elk capable, cheap to shoot, and it's available
Yup cheap plentiful ammo with a nice selection of weights. Buddy spends a bunch on ammo and doesn't really spend much time on the range.
270 is the way. If they would make newer 270s with 9 or 8 twist barrels, I'd probably buy another one, but mine is currently shooting 145 eldx at 3000 fps over rl19. A 6.5 prc doesn't really outperform it until you get past 4 or 500 yards which is at the ragged edge of ethical hunting distances.
"Ethical" is extremely subjective and up to an individual. Advantages at 4-500 yards are definitely worth considering for most good shooters.
Thanks to RL26, I’m pushing 150gr Accubonds at 3100 with excellent accuracy. Recoil is definitely noticeable lol
Many in the know want the 270 twist rate to be upgraded. Ron Spomer has brought it up. But .... marketing. New rifles, new cartridges. Sales.
What your asking for is a 6.8 western
@@micahdunleavy9227 You think so ? I shot National Match for over 25 years so I know how to dope the wind, now I shoot PRS out to 1000 yards. Add to that your shooting position is often compromised while hunting and with a light barreled rifle and a lower power scope it becomes even more difficult to hit that 1moa standard. A recipe for disaster and let's hope it's a miss and not a gut shot animal. I can ring 6" steel at 600 yards like phoning home but hunting isn't off a bench.
My son-in-law asked me this exact question about 6 months ago. We were looking for something with light recoil, ammo availability and low cost, flat shooting and something that could be used on a lot of different game. We ended up choosing the 270 Winchester. This is probably my favorite cartridge and I have taken deer, antelope, elk and my dad has even shot a moose. so it is pretty versatile. This is an awesome first caliber as well as a top hunting and shooting caliber.
I am not sure why you dropped the 308, I would have probably replace the 30-06 with the 308. Same bullets, but less recoil. A better choice for a new hunter. I think the 6.5 is great for deer, but lack for larger game. As additional note, I got a 7mm-08 two years ago and I am having a heck of a time finding any ammo. There are 4 stores that sale ammo and I have been checking for over a year and I just don't see any 7mm-08 ammo.
Great video, thanks for sharing.
Try on line
Agreed. No reason to put a young new shooter behind a 30-06 before a 308.
30-06 over 308 any day
@@jayhaddan7927 Why? Without a qualifying statement, what you said is meaningless.
7mm-08 factory has been a nightmare to locate even online for the last couple years. Had a few boxes show up locally and the price reflected how hard it is to come by.
I am a new hunter and there is something special about a 30-30 to me. I love lever guns and it’s a joy to shoot. The loads aren’t too powerful and training on it is very enjoyable.
Blr in 7 mm08
One of my first rifles was a Marlin 336 in 30-30. I killed tons of big pigs and several Deer with it. Never shot anything twice. 200 yards and under its a perfect hunting caliber. The all copper bullets really helped the 30-30 find new life against medium game.
Savage 99c 308 win
Another video that gets you thinking. Until recently the 7-08 would be a go to for new hunters. Today I went to 6 sporting goods stores between Tucson and Phoenix and in 7-08 I only found Winchester BST or Vortex ammo, probably less than 20 boxes combined. The 6.5 PRC was in a similar or worse boat. 270, 30-06 and 7mag were a little better but hands down there was 308 ammo in abundance in every store I went to. I haven’t found any of my 308’s particularly finicky on loads and no animal on the planet will ever know the difference between getting hit with a 150 or 165 grain from a 308 or 30-06. I shoot everything on your final 6 list and love them. But in the current market, I would have to go with the 308. My sons have been shooting the caliber since they were around 10 with no brake. Today you can get a pretty good selection of rifles that either come with a brake or are threaded. And a good 308 with a 165 Accubond or Barnes TTSX is pretty good medicine for most any non-dangerous game in the lower 48. Thanks for the video, well thought out!👍
7mm08 should really be more popular than it is.
I think it would be if we were in anything resembling a normal economy.
Agree 100%
It’s a balanced cartridge but if doesn’t do anything any better than those all around it. Just no reason for it to thrive.
7mm rem mag is superior, 7mm08 has trash ballistics
@tesla82111 I have both cartridges and agree however it depends on what your using it for. For shorter range deer hunting here in the northeast I will take my 7mm-08 almost always. If you regularly have longer shots, want a long action and are ok with having alot more recoil then the 7 mag is great. They are 2 different cartridges that are good for different things.
For almost 30 years I shot a 338Winmag for everything! Nowadays I'll grab a 7mm08 for everything and be extremely happy. From antelope to elk. The 7mm08 is a darn fine cartridge!
Spot on mate love the 7mm08 has never let me down cheers Yogi Australia 🇦🇺🤙🤙
As a new hunter, I went with .270 and I've been happy with it, and I don't know if there's a better option for new hunters looking for a "do-all" cartridge (short of handling brown bear). As a more experienced hunter and shooter, I'm now looking at expanding into the magnums with a .300 PRC. With those two I should be good for everything in North America and out to any distance that I can responsibly shoot. A faster twist barrel for my .270 is also in the works so that I can launch heavier monometal bullets.
270 is great. Correct bullet type and shot placement. That is the obvious. Hell, they used to take game with flintlocks. They knew how to shoot well.
I did a similar video a couple of years ago and chose the .308 WIN. Why did I choose the .308 WIN? I like short action rifles, for those who don't reload .308's are easy to find, recoil is still easy enough to handle even in smaller lightweight riles, wound channel's are sufficient, energy level's good farther away than 99% of hunters should shoot, don't like long barrels that add weight and have less maneuverability. The 7mm08 is a great cartridge, but still not the killer like the .308 WIN.
Always like your video's Jim.
Absolutely right, 270 win was my first rifle, initially I hated it and my accuracy was all over the place, it took me some time to deal with the flinch. Imagine if that first rifle was 300 win mag or 28 Nosler.
7mm-08 if elk is a possibility, 6.5 CM if it's deer and smaller, and 30-06 if you want the widest variety of bullets.
6.5 works fine for moose, so i doubt elk is any issue.
7mm08 is trash. Low powered and bad ballistics. 7mm rem mag is much better.
I agree with your reasoning but I favor the 7mm-08 due to its low recoil and versatility. If I were to put more emphasis on availability I would probably go with the 270.
257 Roberts it is a great intro cartridge that you can keep for life.
It was the inspiration for so many cartridges to follow. Loved by many. Truly a great cartridge. Should never fallen into the obscurity it has. Not dead though. You can still find ammo.
Awesome and timely video-Jim does his research and breaks this subject down. He can’t cover the complete gamut of calibers and game…but he did a great job of being as broad on the subject as he could yet still give solid options.
243 Winchester or the 7mm08 with a nosler partition bullet or swift A-frame, or a barnes X-bullet.!
You have no idea how much I needed this video! Thanks!!!
The best new caliber is the one you can readily get ammo for. Unless you handload and get actually get components. .308 Winchester is about the only one that readily comes to mind....
i agree
Just got one for my first rifle. Being off by 30 yards within 300 yards isn’t going to matter much
@@Eric-bh7jy awesome, you’re gonna be happy with 308 all around👍🏽
And in every platform. It would be just ahead of 270 & 30-06 for a new hunter because of the limited platforms they are currently in. Ammo for .308 is about the lowest priced and most available of them all.
@@Eric-bh7jy Great choice, 308 hits hard. Get some barnes ttsx bullets and hunt whatever you want within 300yds for proper bullet expasnion.
My first rifle was a 270 and it has been a great rifle. I got a 7mm-08 for my daughter’s first rifle since, I could it in a Ruger American compact.
The largest game I hunt is white tail deer in South Carolina. I use several cartridges. .25-06, 6.5 Creedmoor, .308 Winchester and .243 Win. I have had great success with the .25-06. Low recoil, shoots flat, and cheap to shoot.
I am really glad to see the 7mm-08 in your final choices. I made that choice for my son’s first center fire rifle when he was 14. It has served him well in the deer woods. In fact, I find myself using it in lieu of my .30-06 quite a bit when my son is not hunting that day.
New to long range shooting. Just bought the 6.8 western X-bolt. Love it and it’s been easy to stock up on ammo. I am definitely working on a flinch.
Solid list. I'm a big fan of the 7mm-08 (looking forward to elk season in a few months) but a new hunter can't go wrong with any of your top five (or six). Winchester, Tikka, Savage, and Ruger all make new rifles in 7mm-08 and I'm sure others do too. Ammo is easy to find out east but I can find it at my local Scheel's here in Colorado all the time as well. A novice hunter today could grab a Tikka T3x Lite with a Leupold scope, a nice sling, a decent soft case, and a few boxes of ammo and keep it under or around $1,000. Or grab a Ruger American with a Burris scope and keep it under $700. Lots of options. If the new hunter is only hunting deer and smaller game, then I'd probably have gone .243 Win. Cheers!
Just shot my tikka t3 270 today. If u hand load try 4831sc powder in 2506 3006 and 270. If you can get hands on hammerbullets there most accurate all copper bullets i found.
I haven't seen 7mm08 for sale in years
Weatherby vanguard and Howa 1500 are the best value hands down. Ruger American is cheap feeling .
@@sinistersilverado965 then you haven't been looking had zero issues finding one here
7mm08 is trash. Low powered and bad ballistics. 7mm rem mag is much better.
Finally giving a little love to the 270 win? Lol. Thanks Jim for the video.
When I was deciding I narrowed down to 3 calibers .243, .300 bo, and 350 legend. I ended up deciding on the 350 legend. It shoots flat at range, low in recoil, cheaper than most cartridges, and is so readily available I could grab a box at wal-mart. Not to mention it’s a straight wall cartridge so it’ll be one that most people can use in regards to cartridge regulations
Very interesting to see your thought process. Might i suggest you putting a line through the eliminated options instead of darkening them? Just to make them easier to see.
I constantly hear people saying that ammo for the 6.5 prc is impossible to get. Other than that the only problem is... the video is too short. I love this stuff.
For young newbie’s, 7mm-08 is tough to beat…smacks relatively hard, shoots pretty flat, and is easy on the shoulder. Not to mention, it’s a short chamber.
Only real draw back is ammo availability over the last couple years. But even before that, it isn't as available as it's parent caliber 308.
@@mot0rhe4d40 so true…in fact, my most recent rifle purchase was a 308, for that very reason. I wanted the 7mm-08, but ammo cinched the deal
@@hikenmikes8262 I bought my oldest Her own hunting rifle in 243, I find myself second guessing not going 308. While ammo is starting to show up. 308 just has so many perks on its side.
I can't believe you left off the 378 Weatherby.... great first cartridge for a new hunter
300 BLK, 30-30, 350 Legend and 243 are all good starter calibers for deer and hog. My neighbors kids learned on a 25-06. I have no experience with that caliber, but have to chance a guess that it isn't too bad on a young boy and girl. Would think 6.5 grendel and CM would work as well.
Pretty good list and great video as always keepem coming brother!!!
I picked .270 for my first bolt action center fire. I picked it for my second one too haha out to 300 it's just plain hard to beat. Add in the availability, load options, chamberings and even nostalgia, I think it becomes the one to suggest even out of the last 3
Nice comments on the various cartridges. When I was looking for a rifle a few years ago, I went through the list and one of the criteria was that some rifle available to me be available in the chambering. I finally selected an Savage 110 in 270 Win. Since I had done a lot of homework I also picked up a couple Savage Axis rifles in 308 and 22-250. I found a takeoff Axis barrel in 243 win and swap that out with the 22-250 depending on my whim. The Savage Axis barrel swap is very easy. 6.5 Creedmore gets smoked in every test against a 270 Win. The 7mm 08 was on the short list. O'Conner was spot on many decades ago. I have AR-15 style guns in the wounding NATO cartridge, and 300 Blackout. I have AR-10 style in 308 and 45 Raptor, a literal shoulder fired cannon.
Thanks for the video brother enjoyed it much.
The venerable ‘06, load it up or load it down no other cartridge has the range of this old guy. Love it, it’s outlasted a ton of newcomers. Come on Jim, give me a break.
300wm is much more versatile than the 06 if you reload
@@rollandklontz Not sure, just looked at the Nosler Manual, agreed this is just Nosler but loads from 110 gr up to 220, WSM doesn’t go that light.
@@dancrane674 There is plenty of load data for 110gr bullets and 300wm.
But why would anyone want to load 110gr bullets in any 30cal?
Well the first answer is someone thought it worthwhile or there wouldn’t be a 110 gr bullet available. I thought about it for varmints (coyotes) but went with 22-250. Also, loaded my ‘06 with 124 gr Hammer Hunters for deer and antelope this year. The groups and fps is great. WSM is a great short action cartridge no question.
@@dancrane674
Just to clarify i am talkng about wm not wsm.
30-06 and 300wm are both established and fantastic cartridges and both are incredibly versatile but the 300wm is better with heavier bullets than the 06.
7.08 is great
I know you were trying to cover the entire country and I generally agree with your picks. My first three thoughts were 6.5 Creed, 7mm-08 and 270 Win. To add one more option, I'd probably go with 308 and for one more... probably 243. If I were to remove two of those, it would be the 308 and the 270. I love the 270 but between the longer action and the higher recoil... my top three recommendations would be 6.5 Creedmore, 7mm-08 and 243. Probably in that order. If I had to spell it out for someone, I'd say to get the Creedmore. This is assuming someone without a rifle today probably won't be hunting elk next winter. I think developing good habits with the lighter recoil outweighs the ability to hunt larger game. At least if I were getting someone started. Good vid!
Thanks for the video--and all of your content. I did a lot of research before finally settling on a 7mm Rem Mag for my first real hunting rifle (adult onset hunter here, for the most part), and I will say that I think you're spot on in terms of it being a great all around caliber but not necessarily the best choice for a new hunter. I bought it because of its power/versatility (in terms of its ability to ethically kill all North American big game, while not being serious overkill for a deer-sized game), and its flat trajectory. But what I didn't factor in was just how long it would take to become proficient at long or even medium range. Hundreds if not thousands of rounds would be required to become consistently accurate at those ranges, and if you're going to put that many rounds through a gun, you might as well do it with a lighter recoiling one less likely to instill bad habits. Then once you're more comfortable with rifles and can better manage recoil, opt for one of the magnums capable of dropping anything on the planet. But first learn how to shoot at reasonable yardages accurately, dependably, and consistently. And I think for most people that means going with a lighter recoiling option.
Shot a bunch of things for 30 years. I absolutely love the 7mm-8. I highly recommended it to most hunters
Hard to argue with your choices. Thanks. Liked video!
I just received an order of 5 boxes of 160 grain Norma Tip Strike in 7mm-08 Remington. I really wish more ammunitions manufacturers would produce more 160 grain loading in the 7mm-08. My TC Venture and Remington 700 both love this ammo!
Hi Jim glad to see the latest video. My back really bugs me sometimes so I like lower recoil these days. I really like AR calibers, like 350 Legend, 6.5 Grendel, and 223. In Michigan, we really only have the small game, deer, and black bear. The 350 Legend has been getting quite popular here for deer and bear. 200 yards for the 350, and 300+ for the 6.5 Grendel on whitetail/black bear. I'll crack a whitetail at 200 with my 223. The GLFA 223 Wylde has become my favorite firearm, surpassing my loyalty to my old, trusty 12-gauge..
my first was a 25 06 and I would not change that. I love it
7 mm 08 is probably the best overall low recoil affordable hunting cartridge that you can find in every Walmart. 260 Remington's rate cartridge especially if you have a faster twist barrel and can push some high BC bullets.
As a 270 man I should have said 270. I should have been loyal. Sure it's a longer action cartridge will probably a little more kick than the 308 depending on the bullet size but the downrange devastation should be superior to the 7 mm 08. So why not buy once cry once and gets 270 to start
270 Win is just better than 7mm08
I've really been thinking about 7mm-08 this year. I'm glad it seems to be getting more attention.
270 and 7mm rem mag 🔥 but I would love a 6.5 prc but the bullets are a little expensive
@@ronlowney4700 you are correct with ammo being hard to find. But it is one sweet shooting cartridge. Especially if you hand load, I get consistent 3/4 in groups will the Browning x bolt Western Hunter. Which has a very thin barrel on it. I've got a 30-06 270 6.5 creedmoor and a 308. I always find myself reaching for that 6.5 PRC for both deer and elk.
The ammo shortages really hit everywhere different 😂 7mm, 6.5prc, and 7-08 in my area is rare as hens teeth, 6.5 cm is hit or miss, 270 and 30-06 are available but quality ammo is hard to find, 6mm cm has been the only thing I can recall seeing constantly over the last 2 years but I can't say I've ever seen a rifle chambered in it on shelves
I just about said that’s how it is here in Montana. I agree.
@@ronlowney4700 been most everywhere from west of big timber and seen similar selections. I'm talking general box stores, cabelas, sportsmans, and Murdochs generally. The smaller shops are fairing a bit better but still limited unless you're shooting 308 or .223. What is available is 10-20 bucks a box more than it used to be even for stuff like federal blue box. Gun shows have great selections but they are outrageous on prices. I haven't seen a box of 7-08 on shelves in over 2 years and could count on 1 hand the amount of times I've seen new brass. 6.5 prc is only slightly better, I've seen it on shelves every 2-3 months for a day before it's gone and have yet to see new brass for it. 7mm is by far the most available of those 3 and I've only found one spot to have good stuff like Barnes and Hornaday on a constant basis and I wouldn't dare say where 😂
.308 was mine and what I would recommend to anyone!
Mine (that I owned) as well, shot it from 10 years old to 44 years old. Still take it out for more open areas. Under 200 yards though, it's Grendel for me now.
I started chasing deer with a ruger .44 magnum carbine at 8 and killed my first one with it. So both of the above are a power upgrade...lol.
Found your choices solid on the overall thought. I have better than sixty years afield and a round that makes you shoot well, that’s flat and fast is always my choice. The 25-06 has one shot kills 90 plus percent of the time. Taken elk, black bear, wild hog, deer of all sizes and all problematic critters. It’s one of those cartridges that performs way beyond paper numbers on game!
Very underrated, if you have never experienced one.
I would say the 270 is best on list for a newbie. Deer elk bear antelope lots of copper bullet choices
Great video Jim!
I sure like watching your channel a lot recently dude. I've always watched the main top eight channels or so on gun tube and it gets kind of boring after a while or not boring I should say but a bit stagnated. For some reason I hadn't come across your channel until recently and you really breathe new fresh air into the venue. Thanks for the hard work you put into this it is much appreciated. Remember to thumbs-up guys!
Thank you 😊
The 6.5 Creedmoor and 6.5 PRC are just shorter modern versions of the 6.5x55 and the 6.5-264 Norma, not necessarily better just different. The Swede has about 100 fps advantage on the Creedmoor and possibly more if handloaded and fired in modern rifles. The pressures on the Swede are kept lower because there are so many ex military rifles with varying quality of steels used. The Norma started life as a benchrest competition cartridge but is a great hunting cartridge as well, it has a 250 fps advantage over the Swede and is neck and neck with the 6.5 PRC.
Gun and ammo manufacture are just trying to entice the public with new cartridges that have similar ballistics to cartridge that have been around for a long long time. They are just trying to make more money off of you.
270 WIN FTW, good for everything including even moose (shot placement is everything) Flat shooting, just an absolute king of a round. can be reloaded down to shoot varmints or up to 150 grains or more. Point blank accuracy to almost 300 yards
I'm still saying you were unlucky with that wildebeest, I know quite a few guys that hunt them very successfully with 6.5 creedmoor. I agree with your cartridge selection, but I would have kept the 308. New shooters must be careful of the magnum cartridges, try before you buy. Thanks for the great videos.
I decided for my first hunting caliber to go for the .308 Win. Both the .308 Win. and the .270 Win. offer deadly ballistics in shootable cartridges and rifles. The .270 Win. shoots flatter and hits harder, but for an all-around hunting caliber, I’m going with the .308 Win. That’s not because the .30-caliber cartridge is better, but because it’s more versatile. I like all the bullet and rifle options as well as the availability of practice ammunition. I live in South Africa.
I normally start new shooters out with going from 22lr to 17hmr, then to 204 Ruger light reloads, then to 357/38 lever Henry, then to 223 lighter loads and then to 223 full loads. Then we go to a 30-30 Marlin and 7.62x39 AK or SKS. I do have 243 Win and 6.5 CM but it depends on what round they are going to use come hunting season. One of the advantages of being a reloader over the years is that I can take a 270 Winchester and load them light for a few boxes with SR4759. Then I gradually increase powder and switch to IMR4350. I monitor the reaction of the shooter over a few weeks and see at what point they start to feel the kick. Most of the time, they are at full loads by hunting season. I know that 4350 is really hard to come by right now, but we got lucky and found an 8 pound jug for a reasonable price last month.
Love your videos man! Wishing more videos like that came out when I bought my frist rifle. But I went with tikka t3x in .308
Thanks for the video
Good video. Sensible conclusions, though I’m going to disagree a bit. The task is a bit difficult because you’re trying to select a cartridge for a new hunter that’s also capable of taking class 3 game (e.g. elk). I usually think of first hunting rifles as being almost exclusively deer rifles on the order of 243, 25-06, or 6.5 Creedmoor. Those all keep recoil around 12 ft-lbs. I know you said 24-28 ft-lbs is where one has to watch out for a flinch, but I think it’s lower than that for newbies. A 30-06 (20-22 ft-lbs) is a lot of rifle to the uninitiated. Its recoil won’t bother some, but it will affect more newbies (and others) than care to admit it. For new shooters that just have to have an elk-capable rifle, I think the choices are: 308 Winchester, 7mm-08, and 270 Winchester-probably in that order. I share your aversion to using 6.5s on class 3 game. I know they can do it and have since the Swede, but I think there are better choices. Given ammo availability where I live, the 308 tops this list hands down in my opinion. I prefer my 30-06 to a 308, but I spent a lot of time unlearning bad habits the 06 gave me when I first got it (my first rifle). I recommend a 243 or 6.5 Creedmoor first, then a 7 or 30 of your favorite flavor once you’ve got the fundamentals and some confidence shooting game. Just my $0.02.
The 270 is a good cartridge. It’s definitely the flattest shooting of these three. I’m a bit sour on it for elk at the moment, however. My brother in law lost one last year on a hunt we did together. Wasn’t the cartridge’s fault. Appears to have been a combination of not ideal shot placement and poor bullet selection (150 SGK). Shot was only at 75 yards. We had good blood and what we think now was a single lung hit. There was a good blood trail in the snow for a while, and we tracked that elk for over a mile over a day. Never found it. Lots of things should have been done differently in hindsight. But that experience reinforced my preference for 30 caliber.
@@ronlowney4700 I tapped out my reply earlier from my phone and probably should have just waited. I don't disagree with you at all. When I said I'm "sour" on the 270 for elk, I intended it to come across as I was personally and unfairly dinging a perfectly good cartridge for an anecdotal bad experience that wasn't it's fault. Scores of hunters better and more experienced than I think the cartridge is great for elk. But bad experiences---even vicarious ones (my BIL flubbed the shot, not me)---still tend to leave an impression.
Not that I was really considering it before, but I will never be tempted to shoot a cup-and-core bullet at an elk in the future. It may work, but a better bullet is cheap (if imperfect) insurance. We knew to use premium bullets before, of course, which brings me back to the main reason I recommend the 308 for newbies: ammo availability. My BIL's options for 270 bullets last year were several flavors of 130 cup-and-cores, 150 SGKs, or 150 SSTs. None of those are as tough as I'd like for elk. He picked what he thought was best of not-great options. If he'd have been selecting ammo for 308, he would have had more and better choices (at least where we live). This year the discrepancy in options is even worse as 308 ammo choices are almost "back to normal" (except for the price) whereas most everything else is slim picking. There is something for most every major cartridge locally, but that something may not be what you want. Having lived through a couple of ammo droughts now, I tend to keep plenty of powder, bullets, and primers on hand for my cartridges to make it through the lean times. Unfortunately, my BIL did not have anything useful banked for his 270 so he had to buy what he could find. Another of the many lessons learned (or re-learned) on last year's failed hunt.
Here's a non-exhaustive list of a few additional lessons learned (or re-learned) the hard way last year: (1) Practice shooting how you hunt. 75 yards offhand is hard to do with adrenaline pumping if you don't ever practice the shot; (2) Don't shoot offhand if you can avoid it. The elk didn't know we were there, we had the thermals going in the right direction, and so we had time to get into a better position and use a tree. My BIL should have done so. He basically panicked and make a snap shot when he didn't have to; (3) Use a premium bullet; and (4) Give the elk some time if they run off. We saw lots of blood at the shot scene and so started tracking almost immediately. Dumb idea. We actually caught up to the elk a little later (he was running with some cows and calves) and busted them out again. I think he had bedded down and we bumped him. If we had waited an hour, I think we would have found him dead right there.
@@ronlowney4700 Thank you!
Solid list by 6.5 Creedmoor is easily on top - incredibly popular, light recoil, and extremely accurate. The .270 is also a great round but .30-06 or .308 is probably the most versatile hunting rounds ever made. My $.02.
6.5 is annoying boutique cartridge it’s made for paper target hunting. 30/06 is available everywhere
The 6.5 creed is a lie in a cartridge lol. People are doing way too much things with a 6.5. borderline unethical sometimes. This is coming from a guy who owns one. I'd rather use my 708
My first center fire big game rifle was a Ruger M77 MKII all weather w/ iron sights, synthetic stock in 30-06. It is a very good rifle and the recoil is not terrible. I do not regret getting the 30-06. Since that first rifle I was fortunate enough to acquire several other rifles in various calibers.
My thought was to find a rifle / caliber that was very versatile and could be used for multiple situations and game animals. I settled on 30-06.
@@ronlowney4700 I agree.... I might even go with a 243 or 260. Obviously, I am an adult man.
After watching my grandson drop several deer I have left the big gun club and now I am a huge fan of the 243 Winchester
Hear ya! I haven't mentioned my 243 up to this point in all the blabbing I've been doing on this thread but with a 100 grain Nosler Partition I'm pretty confident I could kill anything in North America but a Griz. I could kill a Griz but he might get me before he expired so I wouldn't try. ( I miss my 243. It's been at the gunsmith's for like three months trying to get the barrel threaded. That toad probably muffed the job and doesn't want to call me. }
Great analogy for the flinch lol. So true.
Love your vids brother
Great list, I’d personally give it to the 270 just because you could find ammo in a pinch just about anywhere that sells it. Other than that any of your top 3 would be an excellent choice.
I would recommend the 6,5x55 SE. I own a Sabatti Saphire chambered with it and i can tell it is a fantastic beginner cartridge.
The 6.5x55 Swede is go to hunting cartridge for whitetails.
Bro, nice video with excellent aspects of consideration. In a later related video, or an updated version of this video, you should make significant mention of Reduced Recoil loadings now fairly common in Walmart and gun stores, for the 30-06. A Reduced Recoil loading of 125 grain bullets in the 30-06 isn't going to recoil much more than a 243 with a 100 grain loading, and cleanly take deer out to 250 yards or so. Then with added experience and aging, the shooter using the same 30-06 rifle can easily move up to a regular factory loading of 150 or 165 grain bullets, for longer shots on deer or even 300 yard shots on elk or moose in an accurate rifle/ammo combination.
A well known former resident of St. George, Brigham Young once said, "I'd rather have a good six shooter than all the lawyers in Illinois"!! Yea 2Amdt.
Out of that list, the cheapest I've seen in my area on the shelves is the 308 / 270 and 6.5CM. Can't even get 30-30 for less then $40, and that use to be $15 a box, and as far as reloading goes, best of luck to you getting primers, everything else isn't really an issue getting.
I’m curious as to why you did not include the 6.5 x 55 Swede and 6.5-284 Norma. The 6.5 mm projectiles are long for caliber and hunting cartridges can take anything from just over 100 gr to 162 gr bullets. The 6.5 mm bullets have a very high BC which carries more energy down range and have less wind drift in flight and have great accuracy. 6.5 projectiles have very high SD and penetrate very deep into large game. The Swede has been used to take Scandinavian Moose, Yukon Moose, elk, and other large game for over 100 years. The famous African hunter W.D.M Bell used Mannlicher-Schoenauer 6.5×54mm and 7×57mm Mauser to kill African Elephants. The Swede and the Norma have light recoil of 12.9 ft. Lbs and 15.4 ft. Lbs respectively which leads to more accurate shooting and a higher likelihood of the person shooting more frequently because it’s enjoyable and not painful.
If a hunter feels they need more horsepower there is also the 6.5 Remington magnum, a .264 Win Mag which are still reasonable with recoil under 20 ft.lbs, 26 Nosler and the 6.5-300 Weatherby magnum, both have recoil ovre 20 ft.lbs, all have increased velocities but also come with the penalty of increased recoil and shorter barrel life
The fact of the matter is a 6.5 mm projectile has better attributes than any 7 mm or 30 caliber and you can have it from mid to wild. A hunter needs to choose a tough bullet and place it accurately to quickly and humanly harvest game.
The swede is often overlooked
My guess is, 1) he didn't think about it, or, 2) ammo availability. If the new hunter has access to a hunter who reloads, the 6.5 Swede or 7x57 are darn hard to beat. For even less recoil, .250 Savage or .257 Roberts.
@@wdtaut5650 I'm in western Canada , the 6.5 and 7x57 are on almost all hardware store shelves. But it would be a issue with 250 and Roberts , it would be a 100 mile drive to get ammo , lot farther for many . I think I've only seen 257 Roberts once in my life
Love your breakdown..
Anytime I'm asked this very same question.. I always say the same three cartridges:
1) the 7mm-08 Remington
2) the 270 Winchester
3) the 6.5 Creedmoor
Any one will be an excellent choice for a new shooter ( some new shooters are adults )
If I was concerned about ammo availability.. I'd suggest a fourth!
4) the 308 Winchester
That being said.. I'd also say.. this is probably going to be your first rifle.. and you'll most likely aquire another or a few more.
Then you get yourself a 7mm mag or 300 win mag.
Honestly though.. you should already have a 22 LR :)
Inexpensive to shoot and train with. I usually take my 22 LR every range trip. I start shooting it first then step up to my deer/black bear rifles.
It's always a great day at the range.. especially with my grandkids!
@@ronlowney4700 definitely can't go wrong with the 308 Winchester!
I tried the 7mm-08 back in 2000 and fell in love with that cartridge!!!
great brake down and from your top 3 I would pick 6.5 prc
Anything within 200 yards with a 308 for a new shooter.
I agree with you except the 25-06. That round is good for game up to elk with 120 grainer. I would have kept that one before the 243. Love the 243 but for game up to elk you get a bigger and faster bullet with the 06. Still pretty sound reasoning in this video.
My boys both started with 7mm08 now shoot 300wm 7rm I personally like my 6.5PRC it hits steel way harder than 7mm08 sacks deer on the spot
Great video!
Good video. My thoughts. Expense wise, 308, 165 grain. 3006 only goes 100 ft per second faster but excellent. 270 love it. Over 300 yards, different story, but really that’s rare. I’ll pull out the 7mm RM.
Eliminate all proprietary cartridges...any company that develops a cartridge and makes the rifle, or develops a new cartridge (hornady and weatherby come to mind) and does not allow ammo to be made without licensing. you get my point. That is why I will stay with the 243, 30-06, 308, 270, 300 Winmag.
Thank you
I’m a new shooter and I went with 308 over the craze of the 6.5 creedmor because I will want to shoot elk. I know it won’t be crazy for long range hunting but I will definitely want to start at shorter distances for my first hunts anyway.
It will be a fun and cartridge to learn to shoot with and see how far I can stretch it from a bench as well. I also liked the shorter barrel options.
As a new shooter you should go with a 6.5 it has less recoil then the 308 …the 6.5 craze is new here in America but the 6.5x55 Swede has taken more Elk for the past 120 years then the 308 and the 30-06 combined. The 6.5cm is just an upgraded 6.5swede
@@yurikfarba7169 Yeah for sure, but a 308's recoil is fine. Put on a suppressor and its next to nothing.
@@Monscent unfortunately I can’t put a suppressor on anything here in NY. It all depends on the rifle too … I have a tikka .308 t3x lite that kicks more then my Benelli R1 300 win mag
You'll be fine hunting Elk up to 300 yards with good bullets and proper shot placement. 308 is the best mix of recoil, cost, and energy your can get IMO.
You done a great job ,, and I agree with you on all of it.
I was surprised that the 6.8 W was not dropped from the list for the category of number of firearm makers (as stated later in the video).
Conversely, I was surprised that the 280AI was dropped, there are dozens of rifle manufactures making rifles for his chamber.
Great discussion for sure!
Pretty solid list. However, I would have to keep .308 in the mix. The ammo is so readily available and it isn't a shoulder banger, especially if you reload for it. Love the 7mm-08 too but MAN is the ammo scarce as a Unicorn, at least in my neck of the woods. Thanks for sharing your thoughts on these great cartridges. Stay well and God Bless.
My first gun was a 30-06. Great gun. Accurate* (see story) and will take anything down. Widely available and hard to beat in versatility witching 500 yrds on any game. But…. I was a young kid at the time, killed my deer just fine, but If I’m honest, I developed a flinch. Stopped hunting for a bit and then went into archery. As a 12 year old I didn’t like the recoil. As an adult I wanted to get back into shooting, and I got a 7-08 to learn the mechanics and unlearn my flinch. Love that gun. It has done wonders for me and it is a joy to shoot. Not much different then my daughters .243. Since the switch I have shot the big guns, 338 ultra mag etc. but grateful I took the time to swallow some pride and learn. Still have and hunt with the 30-06. Love your top 3. Hard to beat the 7mm-08 as a new hunters first gun. I can’t wait for the 7 prc to hit the floor. I think I have converted to the 7’s over the 30 cals. Keep up the great work.
great review. the offerings remaining @ 9:30 make a great list for consideration, and the final three (12:03) = can't go wrong
7mm-08 is the answer. 👍🏻 Great video as always Jim!
in parts of the country the 350 legend is replacing the 243 for young and small frame shooters. Plenty of rifles available and ammo is easy to find. Not a long range round but perfect for deer in the woods of the south.
I absolutely LOVE my 6.8 Western! The lack of support has been a bit discouraging. I bought enough to last me decades of hunting, but I'd still like to see it gather more traction.
.270 all day long. There’s just so many ammo options, and it is a pleasure to shoot all day.
Definitely the balanced content
Great information
Always spend time to do the homework and if possible go and shoot various calibres until you find your own sweet calibre
Just looked up few days ago even .223 range ammos are 0,5€ at cheapest per round, meaning you buy the huge 1000 round box for 500. Otherwise it starts raising to 0,6-0,7 per round.
In the 6.5 PRC I would avoid the Eldx and use either Bond Strike or Speer Impact to make sure they hold together and expand realiably. Terminal Assent also should be an excellent choice for the PRC.