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Showdown! 7mm Rem Mag -vs- 7mm PRC

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  • Опубликовано: 4 мар 2023
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    For over 60 years, Remington’s 7mm Magnum has been the most popular 7mm magnum, outpacing the 7mm Weatherby Magnum, 7mm STW, 7mm Mashburn, 7mm WSM and 7mm Remington Ultra Mag. Now there’s a new contender for the middleweight champion, the 7mm PRC. So far, it appears to be amazingly popular for a cartridge that was just introduced a few months ago. Will it unseat the 7mm Remington Magnum as the most popular?
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Комментарии • 1,2 тыс.

  • @WHOTEEWHO
    @WHOTEEWHO Год назад +334

    My opinion from a hunter's perspective....the advantage of the 7mm PRC is insignificant at hunting distances. Very large majority of big game taken inside 300 yards - almost all inside 500 yards. The PRC really gets an advantage out past hunting distances. (Also speaking to factory ammo since I am a reloading newby)

    • @EtherFox
      @EtherFox Год назад +14

      I feel the increased weight justifies using 7PRC in contexts where 7RM gets badmouthed/dismissed for its (comparably) low weight/low CD (vs 300WM).

    • @Ultimatereloader
      @Ultimatereloader  Год назад +26

      Good perspective who tee who!

    • @WHOTEEWHO
      @WHOTEEWHO Год назад +41

      @gavintoobe most of my whitetail have been inside 50 yards 😆. I've taken 2 mule deer - both right at 175 yards. To a western hunter may mean more, but even then most people should not be taking shots beyond 500 yards

    • @marythelen7480
      @marythelen7480 Год назад +19

      my thoughts exactly, and also when these fads come out you should wait to see if they last. I know a lot of people regretted buying some new chamberings when the short mags and super short mag craze was in. If your into long range shooting competitions all of these high BC bullets are great, but I'd plan on reloading my own too.

    • @cbsbass4142
      @cbsbass4142 Год назад +30

      @@WHOTEEWHO 50 yards. That's why I have my 1950 Winchester Model 94 in 32 Win Spl. At my age, I'm too tired to walk 800 yards to pack out an elk or Muley in bear country. :)

  • @williammills7778
    @williammills7778 Год назад +40

    My second rifle purchased over 30 yrs ago was a 7mm RemMag. I learned to hand load on that rifle and see no need to upgrade to a 7mmPRC. While the ballistics are impressive, I'm not a long range shooter. Thanks for posting I really enjoy the content. Cheers 🍻

  • @steveneal8247
    @steveneal8247 Год назад +95

    Since I already own a 7Rem Mag that is capable of sub .50 MOA accuracy, I will happily stick with the 7RM. However if I were starting out today I would definitely go for the PRC. As it is the increased performance of the PRC is not significant enough to warrant my making a change.

    • @cbsbass4142
      @cbsbass4142 Год назад +6

      Bingo. That way they will keep 7 Rem Mag ammo on the shelves and not just give gun writers more poop to talk about.

    • @Accidic
      @Accidic Год назад +9

      I don't see any plausible universe that 7RM disappears from shelves and I would much sooner go look for it than 7PRC. To Hornady's credit, they seem to load even for obscure cartridges at least in small runs. The bigger threat to the disappearance to 7RM is more likely Washington.

    • @cbsbass4142
      @cbsbass4142 Год назад

      @@Accidic You're right about the biggest threat. Too many people have 7 Rem Mags. I could go get 7mmRM TODAY 2 miles away, but I'll bet I can't find 7 WSM or 7 SAUM or 7 PRC on the same shelf...and if I did, I'll bet it won't be less than $40 a box for the latter 3. I do know Midway USA has exactly ZERO of the latter three, and if they did have it, Nosler Trophy Grade 7 mm SAUM would cost you $120 for just 20 rounds. When they DO GET ANY the 7PRC will cost you $60 a box for the cheapest (Copper only) that's not listed "OUT OF STOCK-NO BACKPRDER." (Their precision Hunter and Match, you are out of luck) I CAN get 7mm Rem Mag for $35.50 a box right now. EASY CHOICE for me. Also already have dies since a relative has a Rugger M77 in the caliber.

    • @WillyK51
      @WillyK51 Год назад +1

      The 7RM and the 7PRC are identical in performance (except case, one has a belt the other no). Why would you need a heavier than 168-180 Grns bullet fo hunting in 7mm. And lets see if the PRC will take over all other 7mm. Plenty Guns But AMMO? and $$. Ok I'm Old fashion, but do not own a 7MM , and on the market to get one for grandson. Conclusion it will be a 280 AI.And it comes in 1:8 pitch. Didn't see that one comming? 🤣Not Crazzy, put all the specs, loads and data on the table(not as available as the 7RM), but have a pile of 30-06 cases. Pushing a 168 at under 100 fps of a 7RM not bad for almost WHATEVER 👍

    • @jeffkocsis8250
      @jeffkocsis8250 Год назад

      Agreed

  • @diemos322jones9
    @diemos322jones9 Год назад +22

    Having the 7mag, there's zero % chance I'm going to get into a new round that's going to be harder to find everything for, on top of 2x the price.

    • @garrytalley8009
      @garrytalley8009 6 месяцев назад +1

      You are a smart man. I just ordered a 7mm PRC just because it does have some nice features. I just got a light budget rifle that I do intend to just shoot Hornady Hunting Ammo out of and will only zero it and hunt with it. It won't be used for target shooting. I did have a 7mm Rem Mag but had given it to my son in Arizona. I have a lot of rifles and do reload. If I did have a 7mm Rem Mag I wouldn't have bought this new 7mm PRC for the reasons you listed. But hey I am a gun nut and just want one but will not be shooting it any more than I have to, to familiarize myself with it and zero it to hunt with.

  • @mikemelina7395
    @mikemelina7395 Год назад +13

    I just went over to Ammoseek and looked. The only factory manufacturing 7PRC ammunition is Hornady and the cheapest I could find was $4.25 per round.
    7mmRM on Ammoseek from $1.35 per round and everyone loads for it. You can get whatever bullet you want up to 175gn. If you don't reload, this is a no-brainer. Maybe 3-5 years down the road the PRC will be worth a look.

    • @scottcrawford3745
      @scottcrawford3745 Год назад

      If it's still around, and not only in PRS and F-class matches...

  • @jeffb.3052
    @jeffb.3052 Год назад +10

    I already know 7prc and 7 mag are close, give us the recoil comparison and other possible reasons to switch from 7mag.

  • @jonparker4108
    @jonparker4108 4 месяца назад +2

    "Well I had a custom 7 rem mag made"

  • @theLTrain700E
    @theLTrain700E Год назад +17

    I got my 7mm Rem Mag re-barreled in a 1-8" twist 2 years ago. With hand loads I get 2935 with Berger 184. Glad Hornady took notice and made the 7PRC

    • @cbsbass4142
      @cbsbass4142 Год назад +1

      I hadn't even checked the Berger data. Quarter Minute Magnums used them some.

    • @colearmstrong2450
      @colearmstrong2450 Год назад

      That’s incredible velocity from a 184. Did you do anything with 160 grains or lighter?

    • @theLTrain700E
      @theLTrain700E Год назад +1

      @@colearmstrong2450 unfortunately I have not. Due to the Primer shortage, I have not taken the liberty of trying different bullets, primers, brass, and powders. I do have everything, besides primers, ready to test. Hornady 162gr, H4831SC, and Nosler Brass. In addition to those, 195 Berger EOL, 160gr CX, and others. Hopefully availability and price becomes favorable again

    • @orwellknew9112
      @orwellknew9112 8 месяцев назад +1

      3519 ft-lbs muzzle energy is pretty stout for a 7mm Rem. Must have a long throat to avoid high pressure.

    • @RookCustoms
      @RookCustoms 28 дней назад

      🤔

  • @JimmyJusa
    @JimmyJusa Год назад +26

    I think ammo cost and availability is a factor in this conversation, especially if you already have a 7 rem mag. A premium and new cartridge with the 7 prc means much more expensive factory ammo, plus the options for rifles are on the higher spectrum as well if you are looking at hunting rifles and not precision options. I think that it is a great new option if someone is looking and has the money to get it, but it's not so much better that a person should feel the need to sell their 7 rem mag for it. Out of the 3 prc cartridges, this 7 would be the one I would pick for sure though.

    • @ethanhenry5873
      @ethanhenry5873 11 месяцев назад +2

      Not just a factor, THE factor. $1.10 for rem mag vs $1.80 for PRC.
      That's not a contest for me

  • @laneerwin968
    @laneerwin968 Год назад +50

    You should really do more videos like this. There’s a lot to learn with a series like this cross comparing cartridges.

    • @samw2768
      @samw2768 Год назад

      Go to a real reviewer like Ron spomer he does that exact thing but better than this clown

    • @cbsbass4142
      @cbsbass4142 Год назад

      There are too many of them IMO. Why compare the 7 PRC to the 7 Rem Mag instead of the 7 WSM or 7 SAUM, more in common/ similarity? It's apples and oranges.

  • @HockeyDad6631
    @HockeyDad6631 Год назад +28

    Great video! I agree with many in the comments. Starting new, build/buy a 7 PRC. If you have a 7 RM that shoots, keep it!

  • @bobmcmillen4502
    @bobmcmillen4502 Год назад +15

    I have both. Love both. 7 prc is indeed inherently accurate. Stupid easy to tune. 7 PRC is the easy button. A customized Rem Mag will hang all day. But for out of the box, factory ammo, 7 7:11 PRC all the way. If you took 100 Rem ( factory) Mags and 100 factory PRC’s….. PRC’s would be more accurate. The bullets to use boys is the Nosler Accubond Long-range in 175 gr. Great bc’s, great expansion. Work great in both Rem Mag and PRC

  • @DrewEdwardBacklas
    @DrewEdwardBacklas Год назад +87

    You CAN build a 7RM rifle and reload to be close enough to 7prc for the difference to be negligible. If you have already done this then there isn’t much reason to switch. If you haven’t then the 7prc is superior as it has all the modernization work done already to take advantage of modern projectiles.

    • @guyminer2384
      @guyminer2384 Год назад +7

      I have a long and happy history with the 7mm Rem Mag. But the 7 PRC is awfully good... :)

    • @jamesmooney5348
      @jamesmooney5348 Год назад +1

      I agree

    • @dameander
      @dameander Год назад +5

      Agreed. Same with the 300 WM and 300 PRC.

    • @texpatriot8462
      @texpatriot8462 Год назад +4

      @yesterday I think the PRC is better for hand-loaders than the RM b/c there is no belt to fuss with. I bought my 280AI for that reason. While I won't sell it, I would get the 7PRC if I was buying a new rifle. All I would need is dies and brass to get started.

    • @long-range-eliminator
      @long-range-eliminator Год назад +2

      Well the rum has 1:9 twist prc has 1:8. So put a faster twist rate on or find some good fast burning powder. Cant go wrong with imr 7828 rl26 couple more than can get you faster speed than the prc. If speed is what you want with heavy bullet do not forget about the 7stw 28 nos and the 7mm tejas !!

  • @shootingthebreeze4432
    @shootingthebreeze4432 Год назад +10

    Gotta go with the 7 Rem Mag. Cheaper brass, easier to find rifles and too similar of a performance to justify the extra cost of the “belt-less PRC.”

  • @fisherus
    @fisherus 11 месяцев назад +20

    I've been a 7mmRemMag lover since I got my first one in '64 for my high school graduation present that was collectively given to me by family members. I put in the suggestion into everyone's minds by suggesting that I thought that it would be perfect and most remembered. It was! I still have it 59 years later. It needs rebarreled again for the third time and it now sports a McMillan stock and a Nightforce NXS 5.5X22X50 R1 reticle scope. Between the deer, elk, antelope, wolfs and bear, I lost count at over a hundred animals.
    Now, the betrayal. I'm getting old I know because at 77 my body is falling apart however, before it did, I wanted to build one more rifle for myself and when I managed to get the specs that Hornaday sent out to many rifle building companies last year I got a copy and decided that this would be the caliber of my last custom made rifle. It is finally together ready for quarter inch groups at 100!

    • @jaynovella5291
      @jaynovella5291 7 месяцев назад

      Hope you enjoy your new rifle!

    • @jk-kr8jt
      @jk-kr8jt 6 месяцев назад

      Enjoy it man. For years and years to come.

  • @StikmanN8
    @StikmanN8 Год назад +17

    Great review and discussion. I've been hunting with the RM since 1993. I've taken countless animals with this cartridge from as little as 10 yards. The cartridge has been very efficient at taking big game animals for me. That said, if purchasing a new 7mm cartridge today, I'd jump into the PRC. If nothing else, just for the modern updates spoken about. Keep up the great videos. thank you!

    • @franksanchietti7108
      @franksanchietti7108 Год назад +3

      You will have shorter barrel life in 7mm and 300 prc if you planning on shooting all lot!

    • @garrytalley8009
      @garrytalley8009 4 месяца назад

      @@franksanchietti7108That is not likely. They are all shooting bullets at pretty much the same velocity. If shot equally there would be little difference. If you want to compare shooting light loads out of one and heavy loads out of the other which is apples to oranges you can convince yourself you are right, but you are not if all things are equal. I can tell you for a fact a belted case will separate causing a case failure sooner in a cartridge with a belt before a case without a belt is no longer reloadable. I own and reload for a lot of these cartridges. If one shoots enough to wear a barrel out, they can well afford a new barrel if they ever get there.

  • @jeffross8400
    @jeffross8400 Год назад +10

    Man...Almost everything I have taken from Antelope to Elk has been with my 110 Savage in 7mm Mag..There is no doubt that the PRC is superior at long range and is a great round for the ELDX. I guess my 7mm mag has that old girlfriend factor...I just keep coming back to her..LOL..Great vid guys

  • @raywells2858
    @raywells2858 Год назад +21

    If I didnt already have a 7mm rifle and was getting one, the 7mm PRC would be the one I would go with. Unfortunately I am pretty old compared to most, pretty heavily invested in the 7mm RM. Im a hunter not a long range target shooter. I have a custom built Rem 700 bean field rifle from the early 80's thats quite the tack driver that I am very content with and I am very unlikely to take a shot beyond 400 yards on game although I can consistently hit well beyond that. That said, I am sticking with my 7mm RM.

    • @guyminer3168
      @guyminer3168 Год назад +2

      I've had a 7mm Rem Mag for quite a while and it's given me elk, mule deer and pronghorn. And one unfortunate coyote... :) I like it and I'll be keeping it.

    • @oneeyedwillie1
      @oneeyedwillie1 Год назад +2

      I've been hunting with a 7mm Rem Mag since the early 80's and love it. My first was with a Rem 700 which put several deer and elk into the freezer. About 13 yrs ago I sold this to my son and bought a Ruger #1 SS in 7mm Re Mag. I too have a lot invested in the firearms I have and as I'm 70ish I don't see myself purchasing any new hunting rifles. I typically don't take shots much over 300 yds. But I don't mind going out to the range with my son and his boys and shooting the longer ranges, helps to know that if that once in a lifetime should show that I could make the shot. With that said if I were in the market to replace my rifle I would probably be looking at the PRC.

    • @garrytalley8009
      @garrytalley8009 6 месяцев назад

      My you are not too old to get another rifle to play with. I myself just ordered one and I am 74 years old. I have a gun safe that's overflowing, and I told myself I didn't need another rifle not too long ago and then here I am having ordered a new 7mm PRC to hunt with. Anyhow enjoy your shooting I do whenever I can.@@oneeyedwillie1

  • @mtnman6942
    @mtnman6942 Год назад +6

    I like the consistent accuracy of my Browning A-bolt, in 7mm rem mag. Shoot/reload 140 gr and 170 gr in both Sierra boat tail and copper. At 67 years old, I’ll keep shooting the 7mm RM, but I do like what I’m seeing on paper about the 7PRC

  • @georgeelijah1132
    @georgeelijah1132 Год назад +4

    I built a 7prc in October of 22 , got lucky and bought a case of edlx 175, hunted with it all through our roughly 3 month deer season here in Alabama , killed several deer from 50 yards out to 512 yards all where doubled shoulders exits and all dropped right there and a couple made it 20 or 30 yards , shot 3 big hogs (300lb +) both shoulders and exit they dropped instantly ! Mine has 26” barrel no noticeable recoil over any other of my long action rifles! On paper I shot a 3/4 inch 5 shot group at 300’ which was my best with it to date , I let the CDS work on that 500 yard shot , I plan to do a lot more target shooting through the summer and am planning a Elk hunt with it in Colorado this year , I am very happy with it

    • @guyminer3168
      @guyminer3168 Год назад +1

      That's a lot of experience with a new cartridge! Thanks for sharing that. :)

  • @thelittledetailscr7231
    @thelittledetailscr7231 Год назад +5

    I am assuming they are relatively equal, given a well built custom rig and competent reloading practices.

  • @texashunter664
    @texashunter664 Год назад +28

    My vote goes to .280 AI. Great hunting cartridge and mild recoil.

    • @kencleg7721
      @kencleg7721 Год назад +2

      Lots of brass w .280 a i any 06 .270 .280 25-06 if I can make 6.5x06 out of 25x06 i usually use .270 Remington and trim The rifle likes best. 1:8 95-160 grain Iam on my 4 th barrel I’ve shot this rifle for 20 years my 300 wsm is 1:12 185/190 Berger’s one hole no since of change

    • @stanleymarucha8194
      @stanleymarucha8194 10 месяцев назад +1

      yes better than both

    • @guyminer3168
      @guyminer3168 10 месяцев назад +1

      The 280 AI is indeed a great cartridge!

    • @davidpkm
      @davidpkm 9 месяцев назад +1

      And the worst barrel life of the bunch by a mile.

    • @johnbodman4504
      @johnbodman4504 6 месяцев назад

      I agree with you, I have two 7mm rem mags that I use for competition shooting and another for hunting. If used for competition shooting where a lot of shots are fired in a short period, the magnum rounds tend to overheat a barrel and then they lose accuracy. A good alternative to magnum rounds are Ackley improved, non magnum rounds, where not as much powder is needed. This leads to only a small decrease in velocity, but a cooler barrel and a longer barrel life.

  • @benwagner4770
    @benwagner4770 Год назад +9

    The real motivation for me to go to the modern cartridges with high BC bullets isn’t trajectory, but wind deflection. At long distance, wind drift is the more difficult variable to estimate, potentially leading to misses or poor shot placement on game.

    • @guyminer3168
      @guyminer3168 Год назад

      True. It's easy to dial for elevation. Estimating the wind downrange is much more difficult.

    • @cbsbass4142
      @cbsbass4142 Год назад

      I wouldn't shoot at any game animal that far away....as far away as I have heard people say they are shooting them. Shooting steel? Have at it. Whatever rings your bell. Animals? No, unless I Was starving and down to one gun and three rounds.

  • @thomasapplegate1584
    @thomasapplegate1584 Год назад +6

    I've had a Rem. custom shop 7mm STW since 1991. I haven't found anything better for Elk.

    • @guyminer2384
      @guyminer2384 Год назад

      7 STW is pretty awesome... No doubt.

  • @johnnybarbar7435
    @johnnybarbar7435 Год назад +12

    7RM because I already have it in a Model 70 sporter that shoots Nosler's into sub moa's and stays dead on every time I check it before season. Numerous long range deer and antelope have seen the ice chest thanks to it. I would not try harvesting game beyond what the 7RM is capable of because there are so many other factors involved when it comes to shooting in the field. 300 yds is a chip shot and 400 to 500 yds, depending on conditions, is plenty long for ethical harvest. All of that is well within a good 7RM's capabilities. For LR or ELR target shooters, there is good reason to consider the PRC especially if you reload since PRC is $4.50 to $7 per round retail while 7RM starts out around $1.40 per round.

    • @garrytalley8009
      @garrytalley8009 4 месяца назад

      Ammo is not as high as you listed. It is more expensive but certainly not anywhere near $4.50 to $7.00 per round. About $50-$55 dollars a box of 20. If one reloads it costs close to the same. I own one and do reload. Nothing wrong with a proven rifle like the 7mm Rem Mag. Not a thing wrong with the new kid on the block either. I like them both.

  • @KA-id4wt
    @KA-id4wt Год назад +9

    When I was 18 I bought a 1968 R700 7mag with the original Redfield tv view scope at an estate sale for 100$. I have killed everything with that gun and I will never change a thing about it.

  • @GeirMeyer
    @GeirMeyer Месяц назад +1

    Nice video as always . .Please keep the good stuff coming,

  • @atmo3275
    @atmo3275 Год назад

    more 7prc please!! thanks for all the info, love your channel

  • @WHOTEEWHO
    @WHOTEEWHO Год назад +3

    I have the ruger American 7mm PRC on order. Hoping it shows up soon

  • @mlybudo
    @mlybudo Год назад +4

    You did a good job on this comparison of the 60 year old + 7RM to the new kid on the block. As I own 2 7RM and I am 8 years older than the 7RM I am good to go. However If I were to start new not owning a 7RM the 7PRC would have to be my pick. Your video peaked my interest in building a 7PRC. Good job on your channel.

  • @JasonVladimir
    @JasonVladimir Год назад +1

    Great video! Thanks for sharing!

  • @yootoober49
    @yootoober49 Год назад +3

    I have a 27" heavy palma shilen prefit in the mail for my old savage 110. Will be fun to experiment with the new cartridge. Great vids on your channel

  • @tommywinthrop3429
    @tommywinthrop3429 Год назад +4

    Im sticking with the 7MM rem mag. Cause i like it plus im already finacialy invested. 1:8.4 twist

  • @guardianminifarm8005
    @guardianminifarm8005 Год назад +6

    Well done as always gentlemen. I have to agree with you completely. As a huge proponent of the 7mm Rem. Mag since mid 1980s, I have no need to change. However, if I was just starting out new rifle and all, I would go 7 PRC for sure. It is more versatile. It is everything the 7 Rem. Mag. has always been and more.
    I started handloading the 162 ELDX with various powders a few years ago in my 7 Rem. Mag. They all proved extremely accurate. It is more than enough and effective on anything I am hunting inside of 600 yards if I am willing/able to go out that far. I am already having this conversation with my youngest who has not yet needed to purchase his own rifle. The 7 PRC is definitely a serious option to consider. Thanks

  • @chrispy398
    @chrispy398 Год назад +1

    I love the talk of the belted brass, gives some insight of the whole thing

  • @johnandrosemarywyatt977
    @johnandrosemarywyatt977 Год назад +9

    Ammo availability will have a lot to do with how long 7prc will be around.

  • @barrysensing7672
    @barrysensing7672 Год назад +12

    The 7mm Rem Mag has been my favorite cartridge for 40 years. I've only shot factory ammo in both of mine, the performance has been awesome. I definitely see the advantage the 7 PRC has with the long heavy for caliber bullets, that's what it was designed for. My only concern is popularity and longevity. Will this new 7 PRC stand the test of time and will the ammo be soooo expensive, like the .300 RUM. I jumped on the.300 RUM when it first came out, now ammo is so expensive that I can't hardly afford to shoot it.

    • @WillyK51
      @WillyK51 Год назад

      Can't you just reload. A simple reloading set up under 300$ . Primers the hardest to get. If you got some spare time during the week, Do a step of reloading one evening 1 Hr tops. next time another step, and in 2 weeks have 200 rds to shoot. That 300RUM has plenty life in it. You can load to plink and beyond fact. for tyranosaurus. I started with a lee Handloader and a mallet 50 Yrs ago. And you have no idea how many game/targets have I shot with my reloads(38/357-30-30/7-08/30-06/20 GA/12 Ga) . You do not have to be a Rocket Scientist (Shania Twain) to load some very decent/accurate rounds. Simple can be cheap and effective. Give it a shot and keep shooting for ever👍

    • @zacharyfelkel7924
      @zacharyfelkel7924 11 месяцев назад

      I’ve been reloading since I was 17 and figured it out for the most part. Now I’ve been through over 10 cartridges and many such as the 6mm and 25 creedmoor before they were a publicly known cartridge. It’s really not a hard thing to do or get into. Sure some things might cost a good bit up front but you’ll get way better ammo as a result.

    • @garrytalley8009
      @garrytalley8009 6 месяцев назад

      I think that all the PRCs have been well thought out and will be here in the future. I am sure that the ammo is going to stay expensive because what they sell is supposed to be premium quality. The design of these cartridges for competition shooting and the number of rifles sold should keep it alive. I reload and have done wildcats in the past. I just purchased a 7mm PRC and hope that factory ammo will shoot good enough I won't need t reload. Hopefully I will just need to shoot a few bullets to get familiar with the rifle and zero it and just use it hunting. But if they don't shoot well, I may need to get dies to reload for it. But it isn't my initial intention. This is not going to be a target rifle for me just a hunting rifle with minimal use. I have quite a collection of rifles that can be shot for bench shooting.

  • @duquedupre
    @duquedupre Год назад +5

    I love how they compare the 7prc to everything in the world except the one that beats it in every category - the 28 Nosler

    • @garrytalley8009
      @garrytalley8009 4 месяца назад

      Not in every way. Availability of ammo, different manufacturers chambering the caliber in their rifles (choices), perhaps accuracy and larger bullets to caliber being stabilized. Faster is not beating anything in all categories, is it? There is no bullet in the market that's beats all others in all categories. Fact!

    • @qdav5
      @qdav5 Месяц назад

      The 28 Nosler also kicks like a mule.

  • @WHOTEEWHO
    @WHOTEEWHO Год назад +2

    My sako s20 in 7mm rem mag is a same hole group rifle. Love it

  • @MisterTengu
    @MisterTengu Год назад +2

    I have an old 7mm rem mag in the safe, never took it hunting due to the weight and nice stock.

  • @ronladuke7235
    @ronladuke7235 Год назад +5

    If you’re buying a new rifle and you are specifically using it for for shooting steel at extreme range, advantage 7prc, If you own a 7mm rem mag for big game hunting and especially if you don’t hand load , spend more money on ammo (more practice) try the 162 eld for long range and your confidence and shooting ability will more than make up for the tiny difference in ballistics.

    • @garrytalley8009
      @garrytalley8009 4 месяца назад

      You missed the point of this article. Both cartridges are good. It depends on what one wants to do with what they have. The 7mm PRC is as good for hunting as target shooting. Either rifle cartridge is capable of the same hunting performance. To suggest banging steel at long ranges is what a PRC is good for is a laugh at best. It is an attempt to make a better all-around 7mm Mag Cartridge and a pretty good one getting rid of the belt and making a wider case that is more forgiving in working a load up and also designing it to shoot larger for caliber bullets if one wants to do that. It is a more versatile cartridge. Only time will tell if it can do as well as the 7mm Rem Mag in the future. Both are great cartridges. I have had both. Pros and cons in both of them. Some of the cons are debatable like all things in bullet cartridges.

  • @Moraprecisionreloader
    @Moraprecisionreloader Год назад +5

    This reminds me about the 243 Winchester and the 6mm Remington in which one was the better round and the 243 Winchester won because it had the most twist.

    • @scottcrawford3745
      @scottcrawford3745 Год назад

      .243 was sold/marketed as a hunting rifle, loaded with 60 up to 100 grain bullets for varmints to deer; The 6mm Rem had marketing issues from the start, being renamed the 244 Remington as well for a bit, plus the slower twist and bullets no heavier than in the 85 grain area. meant it was a varmint rifle.
      I have a .243 Ackley (7-twist) target rifle that shoots amazingly with 107 and 115 gr VLD's out to 1000 yards and beyond,, but I have to work a LOT harder loading for that rifle than for the one I built for a good friend in 6mm Remington (8-twist). and both are nearly identical ballistically to 1000 Yards.

    • @guyminer3168
      @guyminer3168 Год назад +2

      Yup. Good comparison. I've been shooting a 6mm Remington since 1974, and always thought it was just a wee bit better than the 243 Winchester, but... Nothing I've ever done with the 6mm Remington couldn't have been done with a 243 Winchester just as well. BTW, I'm keeping my 7mm Remington Magnum rifles.

    • @Moraprecisionreloader
      @Moraprecisionreloader Год назад +1

      @Scott Crawford what saying is this Scott,in today's world it is know that the faster twist barrels can handle all the weight of that caliber but the thin jacketed bullets will fragments into pieces before the target which means that you load down your loads,but they will shoot OK
      So now all major gun makers are making guns with the one and seven or one in eight twist barrels that's the new new.

  • @derekmcmurry
    @derekmcmurry Год назад +1

    I watched a video by The Real Gunsmith, Randy Selby. My take on his discussion was that Hornady didn't do anything magic with the 7mmPRC because smiths have been using custom reamers to increase freebore in 7mmRemMag for years to seat bullets out longer while still fitting in the magazine. I don't know how much longer the bullet could be seated off the top of my head, but when I had my 7mmRemMag built I did tell my rifle builder that my intent was to use Berger 168 VLD hunting bullets (the 180 wasn't available yet) and I wanted as much case capacity as possible with still fitting the magazine. Whatever he did it worked and worked well. I'm getting over 3000fps with that Berger bullet over 73.0 grains of Retumbo, Fed215M primers out of a 26" Krieger #4 barrel. I did take a Colorado muley at long range with that setup in 2019.
    When the 180 Berger VLD was made available I tried those but could never get groups to my satisfaction and I think it might be due to the 9 twist barrel. I prefer 8 twist for 180s. Taking everything into account, I love new stuff and have a 7mmPRC already which I'm working up loads now with a Hart barrel. I have one on the way from In-Rut rifles, and all the parts to build two more except 1 stock and 1 barrel. Then I went ahead and ordered a BadRock rifle with the MDT chassis in 7mmPRC as well which will have the Defiance action and a Proof barrel.
    I agree with WHO_TEE_WHO regarding insignificant adavantages 7mmPRC v 7mmRemMag, and I'll take it further - at MOST hunting shot distances, which I'd argue is most certainly 400 yards and under, any of us can take our favorite rifle out and punch our tag after a successful hunt. And that's from using an ultra cheap Walmart package rifle in a longstanding caliber like a 243 or 308 and cheap factory Rem corelokt or Winchester ammo....to a $6000+ fully custom built hunting rig with a $2000+ optic and handloads with Lapua brass, match primers, and bullets that border $1 each or more

  • @alienone6854
    @alienone6854 Год назад +2

    Been shooting a .280 Rem with Barnes 140X for 25 plus years, quite a few White tails, several over 500 yds (36+ inches of drop factored in) dead on at 150 yds, never needed a follow up shot, Xs are beautiful performers.

    • @guyminer3168
      @guyminer3168 Год назад

      I watched a hunting partner of mine drop a Brooks Range grizzly with one 140 grain Barnes TSX bullet from his 7mm Rem Mag. Impressive!

  • @advforops
    @advforops Год назад +3

    7 PRC I'm a 300 Win Mag guy. So I 'm starting new and into distance as well as hunting, would like to see how far I can push the PRC out.

  • @coyote_hunter
    @coyote_hunter Год назад +4

    41 years hunting Colorado elk, first 20+ exclusively with a 7mm Rem Mag, 40 years with handloads for whatever I was carrying at the time. The 7mm PRC is, for my purposes, the ultimate 7mm cartridge. I have a Savage 111 that I purchased used with a 7mm Rem Mag barrel that was pitted inside and out. Removed the barrel, Cerakoted the action, waiting for a 7mm PRC barrel.

  • @harveyrousejr.2069
    @harveyrousejr.2069 Год назад +2

    Gavin;
    You have built some awesome looking rifles. I love that green ceracote finish.

  • @jamespmullin21753
    @jamespmullin21753 Год назад +2

    Except for the 7mm Remmag, how many other 7mm mags are not dying out?

  • @user-ou9sh6zn7p
    @user-ou9sh6zn7p Год назад +9

    I have both in multiple rifles and are equally pleased with the performance of each cartridge. the newness of the PRC wrt ammo, dies has so far been a bit of an issue

    • @garrytalley8009
      @garrytalley8009 6 месяцев назад

      The only ones available I think are Hornady and Foster. But they are available.

  • @tonybarnes5309
    @tonybarnes5309 Год назад +4

    Great video. If I were a young person, I would be building a gun collection of the PRC. But as it stands, I have a 338 Win Mag, 300 Win. Mag, 280 Rem / 7mm express, 7mm-08. Growing up, the ARGUMENT between my dad and my uncle was 300 or 7mm both are very good and fun to play around with. I am thinking that maybe my youngest son should try the PRC.

    • @cbsbass4142
      @cbsbass4142 Год назад +1

      I had a Ruger #1 medium sporter in .300 Win Mag. Sorry I let it go, since it was a good-looking rifle, but I don't miss the slight concussion and flinch factor every time my skinny self set that thing off. It didn't just kick it called me names. :)

  • @jamesshaw89
    @jamesshaw89 10 месяцев назад

    fantastic comparison, I really enjoy your guys videos

  • @robertcoffman9563
    @robertcoffman9563 Год назад +1

    Just bought a Fierce Carbon Rogue in 7 PRC. Haven't shot it yet. Had to order scope base from Fierce as it is proprietary and waiting for it to arrive. Scoping with a Vortex PST 5-25x50 MOA

  • @falba1492
    @falba1492 Год назад +3

    Browning announced at SHOT Show, they will be increasing the twist rate of several cartridges, and increase the magazine length and freebore. These include the 7 Rem Mag and the 28 Nosler, as well as the 300 Win Mag and 270 Win. They will be treated to an 1:8” twist.
    This does not bode well with Hornady’s PRC cartridges.
    Right off the bat, that makes the 270 Win better than the 6.5 PRC. It also makes the advantages of the 7mm PRC and 300 PRC negligible, compared to the 7 Rem Mag and 300 Win Mag.
    If other manufacturers follow suit, this will make things very interesting.

    • @Dennisthemenace40
      @Dennisthemenace40 Год назад

      That is very interesting. I read another comment by someone who recently purchased a Remington 700 BDL in 7 REM Mag that had a 1:8” twist. This may be a coming trend.

    • @falba1492
      @falba1492 Год назад +1

      @@Dennisthemenace40 I really hope it’s a new trend. As long as we get more magazine length and freebore, this breaths life into many proven cartilages.
      At one time I considered a 300 PRC, until I realized brass and ammo was almost impossible to get. Only being able to reload with Hornady brass was also a negative.

    • @Dennisthemenace40
      @Dennisthemenace40 Год назад

      @@falba1492
      Agreed. Faster twist rates and more magazine room for the legacy calibers, and especially for the WSM’s, essentially changes the nature of those respected calibers.

    • @falba1492
      @falba1492 Год назад +1

      @@Dennisthemenace40 I’ve always said if the 270 WSM had come out with a faster twist rate, no one would have ever heard of all these Hornady cartridges.

    • @Dennisthemenace40
      @Dennisthemenace40 Год назад

      @@falba1492
      I believe you’re right. I guess it’s just an idea who’s time has come. Hence the 6.8 Western.

  • @frankpavich1410
    @frankpavich1410 Год назад +3

    Great information and video.
    I’ve shot a 7mm mag for year and love it. Time for one of my boys to inherit my 7mm.
    I’m having a 7 PRC built currently from H & S precision. I like to take shots up to 800 yards and I’m excited to try this round.
    I’m torn between optics to put on this weapon. I want to keep it as light weight as possible. Any thoughts??

    • @zacharyfelkel7924
      @zacharyfelkel7924 11 месяцев назад

      Vortex razor lht. Good light through the scope, not too heavy and you can’t beat vortex warranty.

  • @ronaldhansen2585
    @ronaldhansen2585 Год назад +1

    Wanted a 7m so I picked up the 7m prc. Got 3 boxes of Hornady 175 eldx as well. Love the eldx in my 6.5 so hoping for same results.

  • @hardingdies7811
    @hardingdies7811 Год назад +2

    I'll get an 7mm Rem Mag (left-hand bolt), which is more available, and later rebarrel it if I REALLY need distance. Used 7RM in USN and it did fine @ 800+.

  • @fbwguy
    @fbwguy Год назад +5

    I have a 7 Rem Mag with a 1:8 twist. It’s a factory rifle. Allows me to load long and heavy bullets. I just don’t see why I would need a 7 PRC. That being said I’ve traded in my 300 WM for a 300 PRC😊

    • @SpudOutdoors
      @SpudOutdoors Год назад

      I am rocking a 8.5 twist shooting 195gns over 2900 fps. I’ve gotten up to 2980 with Retumbo but switching to n570, 3000 here I come.

  • @thecheapshot1065
    @thecheapshot1065 Год назад +1

    I will although I'm a fan of the seven PRC and ultimately chose that for my new rifle I found a cartridge case when collecting brass and my local range for a 338 win mag. I knew I wouldn't enjoy shooting one at Austin is I plan on shooting and would probably develop a flinch plus if I went with something that big and I was going to hurt my shoulder anyway I would probably go with an 338 ultra mag or Sherman

  • @jamessammann9183
    @jamessammann9183 Год назад +2

    Shot my 7prc today 4 in one hole quarter inch ..not much recoil..love it

  • @DSMattitude
    @DSMattitude Год назад +3

    I already have 7 rem mag, and i have a Krieger 1:8 barrel and a 700 magnum long action awaiting to be built. Still debating on what to build it in. Was considering the PRC, but brass is very expensive and hard to find where i am. So Im leaning back towards 7rm. I have tons of once fired brass already, brass is readily available, i already have dies. Still up in the air.

    • @cbsbass4142
      @cbsbass4142 Год назад

      Hmm. Know the feeling. Yes, my Bro in law got a Browning A-bolt in 270 WSM (a new short magnum Rage thing years ago) Because it was a left-handed gun and what he could find in his price range. Great looking hunting rifle. I Have found EXACTLY ZERO supply of brass for it and, so far, ONE offering brand of factory ammo. But I have the dies if I ever find anything to reload his brass with or make him some handloads with heavier than 130 grain bullets, which was all offered in the Winchester Deer Season Copper Impact (Only factory offering that I have found without custom order). It stinks how some things get ignored like that. the WSMs were all the rage though, just like the PRCs are now around the time I got into hand loading. Hopefully they will not suffer the same fate, as people will certainly move on to the next "new thing."

    • @guyminer3168
      @guyminer3168 Год назад +1

      If you're that heavy into the 7mm Rem Mag, like I am, it's real tough to make the change. My son has one 7mm Rem Mag that I load for (the Bergara in the video) and I have two. I'm not changing. They've done too well for me over the decades. The 7 PRC is probably a better cartridge, but... I don't need anything more than the 7mm Rem Mag.

  • @Nottherealme223
    @Nottherealme223 Год назад +5

    Right now, in my opinion the 7mm Rem is a better option, just based on ammo availability and price. The PRC might take off, time will tell. Most shooters are not going to be able to shoot a tight enough group, from a field position, to see the small difference in drop inside 500 yards. I understand that new cartridges equal new gun sales and that's what keeps companies in business, so more power to them, I just don't feel the need to run out and grab one.

    • @dougblaney-df1rd
      @dougblaney-df1rd 9 месяцев назад

      You could be 100 percent right but modern day I think t😢 have bullets to provey idea

  • @megaprimetfstudios3759
    @megaprimetfstudios3759 Год назад +1

    Im a newbie and shot 15 rounds in the range using 300 win mag and now in a market looking for my 1st riffle! Upon doing some research & watching this vid, im convinced to get 7mm prc! Thank you guys!

    • @zacharyfelkel7924
      @zacharyfelkel7924 11 месяцев назад +1

      If you aren’t hunting big game I’d recommend the 6.5 prc over the 7 prc. That or wait until more 7 prc ammo comes out unless you reload.

  • @jk-kr8jt
    @jk-kr8jt 9 месяцев назад +2

    Time will tell with the new PRC. I would say that if you already have a 7RM, keep it, use it, shoot it, love it. If you're looking for a new toy, give both the RM and the PRC a hard look. Heck give all the 7s a hard look.

    • @garrytalley8009
      @garrytalley8009 6 месяцев назад

      7mm is a great bullet from the 7mm-08 on up. I just ordered the 7mm PRC in a light hunting rifle. Just for hunting. I used to like my 7mm-08 for all my deer hunting. But I have a lot of rifles and have been rotating them to justify owning them all. Not sure what the largest 7mm is these days. I had a 7mm STW that I had given my son. Gave me an excuse to get the 7mm PRC.

    • @jk-kr8jt
      @jk-kr8jt 6 месяцев назад

      @@garrytalley8009 Garry, you have a lot of problems in life. Like have too many rifles and having to rotate them to justify owning them. I'll bet a boat load of people would be willing to take a few off your hands. Naturally your son is at the head of that line. I've never had a STW, a friend did and loved it. I think, not sure, that the 7 RUM is the big dog on the 7mm block. I am sure somebody will say it has the wrong twist and is overbored. But like hot rodding, "there's no replacement for displacement". Do we need that much case capacity? Who knows, that is up to the individual shooter. I'd bet your new 7 PRC will get the job done just fine. Oddly I didn't catch the 7mm/284 bug early on. I was, mostly still am, a 30 and 270 shooter. As hard as I tried I just couldn't find a place where a 7 RM could do something my 300 couldn't. Or where a 280 did anything my 270 or 30-06 didn't. In time I slowly realized that the 7mm/284 bullet really is a sweet spot. Today I am shooting the 7's more, but currently am having an affair with a few 25's. Hey, maybe we both have problems. Haha. Enjoy your new 7PRC, hope it's all you dreamed of.

    • @garrytalley8009
      @garrytalley8009 6 месяцев назад

      @@jk-kr8jt- I like rifles and the right tool for the job, but honestly the more you get the harder it gets to pick which one you want to shoot. A 7mm certainly has the ability to do anything in North America. I love the 25-06 as well but it is a bit light for some game and I prefer a larger diameter bullet if I am expecting I might have a shot at a monster buck or something bigger. You are right we both have a problem. The main problem is figuring out what is best for our situation. I do reload for most all of my guns and that is a hobby in itself, my only problem is choosing my rifle for deer season. I hope that the Hornady Precision Hunter will shoot well out of the box, so I won't reload for this new rifle. Others have done well with it. I only intend to shoot it very little to get it zeroed and familiar with it and there after just hunt with it.

    • @jk-kr8jt
      @jk-kr8jt 6 месяцев назад

      @@garrytalley8009 the few people that I know that use the 25-06 love it. Guess I fell for the 270 after the 30-06 and 300 Wby. Does that 0.02 difference in bullet diameter between the 270 and 25-06 make a difference? I doubt that it does. A few years ago I fell for a few 25 calibers. The old 257 Wby and the even older 250 Sav. Recently I even added an old 257 Rob to the line up. For some reason the 25's just get the job done. No fanfare or bells and whistles, just game on the ground. I really need to start reloading, sounds like a great hobby. But it important in life to know which guy you are. I know I'm the guy that would go too far into the reloading game. But it would offer a bunch of options for some of the older cartridges. I don't know how you feel, but if cartridge development stopped 50 or 60 years ago, I'd be just fine. But we all like the new stuff.

    • @garrytalley8009
      @garrytalley8009 6 месяцев назад

      @@jk-kr8jtThey are a bit different. Bullet diameter is only one aspect. The weight of bullet that they can shoot is another. Each one will have the bullet that is best suited to shoot flat. A 25-06 Remington shines with a 100-grain bullet for flat shooting to 300 yards. a 270 Winchester shines with 130 grain bullets to 300 yards. Both have different weight bullets that shoot well in them. I myself have shot deer with a 25-06 but I can tell you I would prefer a 270 over that just in case I had a shot at a monster buck. But that's me. A person that does great shot placement can get by with less. I have a lot of rifles and like to get a deer with all of them. I am a few rifles behind though because I have purchased a few more than the deer seasons that went by. On reloading, what is too much? I actually load for everything I have pistols and rifles too many to mention. I may not load for a 7mm PRC I just bought for hunting if the Hornady hunting loads shoot well. I hope to just zero with factory ammo and then just hunt with it. But if they don't shoot well, I will be getting dies for that too.

  • @coryclark9259
    @coryclark9259 Год назад +4

    I really wish you had included 7 SAUM in the conversation. I'm contemplating a 7mm build, while I'm considering both of these rounds 7 SAUM is where I'm leaning.

    • @bradleytenderholt5135
      @bradleytenderholt5135 Год назад +1

      Ron Spomer outdoors on RUclips just recently had a Texas long range shooter that had won 4 championships in the F1 class. Listen to that and you will really gain some knowledge!

  • @semperfi6288
    @semperfi6288 Год назад +3

    I would like to see what this 7mm PRC would do with a 197 grain Sierra Match King, or 195 grain Alco bullet. Would be interesting. In a side note, I have NEVER had a problem with the belt on my 7mm Rem Mag in 25 years, and for hand loaders, you can push a 150 grain projectile out of a 7mm Rem Mag at 3300fps with the right bullet, powder, brass combination, and a 26" barrel without signs of over pressure. 3200fps all day. The Real Gunsmith talks about it on his channel. I do it pretty easily with my hand loads in my Weatherby Vanguard s1.

    • @guyminer2384
      @guyminer2384 Год назад

      Yup. My 7mm Rem Mag and 150's do great together. 3200 fps is easy, 3300 fps can be done. With excellent accuracy. It's pretty much a flat-line hunting cartridge, no doubt.

    • @scottcrawford3745
      @scottcrawford3745 Год назад +2

      28" Lilja 9-twist shooting 180 Moly Berger VLD's @ 3000 fps here for F-class for over 20 years... No problem getting that without bad pressure signs and ~ 10-15 reloads on my Norma brass ( well annealed every other firing.) Just less than 24 minutes @ 1000 Yards.

    • @guyminer3168
      @guyminer3168 Год назад

      @@scottcrawford3745 - excellent! :) The 7mm has been a great choice for a long time.

  • @fulldrawfunatic
    @fulldrawfunatic 7 месяцев назад

    In the market for one of these calibers and I'm leaning to the 7 prc. Thank goodness I found this video.

  • @charlesrachac1900
    @charlesrachac1900 Год назад +1

    I always thought you were a Hornady lackeys and you didn't disappoint me

  • @antoniofiammelli1792
    @antoniofiammelli1792 Год назад +4

    Larry Willis has a body die for belted cartridges, man I never throw way any brass , fired brass at the range once in Larry die boom it works , full lenght first , if does not chamber , Larry die does the job ,for me belted brass is all good , good for many cartridges

  • @agskytter8977
    @agskytter8977 Год назад +3

    Beltless magnum for hunting? The 8x68S has been there, done that, for 80+ years.
    Necked down to 7mm or .30 shows that there is nothing new under the sun except new marketing.. 🙂
    Btw: 6.5x68 is also 80 years old. With a 1-8" barrel it is a very good long range round.

  • @jimmoseley2983
    @jimmoseley2983 Год назад +2

    Define long range with the two 7's. I was going to build the 7 PRC, but there was no available brass for reloading. We're killing deer with the 7 mag/ 162 & 180 eldm at 800 to 1100 yds. So I'll stick with the 7 mag until PRC ammo is readily available which is going to be a long time.

    • @guyminer3168
      @guyminer3168 Год назад

      I think we're going to see a lot more 7 PRC data in the near future. Look to Hodgdon's 2023 Annual Manual and also their online Reloader Data site.

  • @edstettin6799
    @edstettin6799 3 месяца назад

    I ended up buying the Bergara Squared Crest in 7PRC. After viewing this video and your video on that Squared Crest in 65 PRC, I was sold. I do not own a 7 mm rifle. So I am one of those guys that will start fresh with the 7PRC. I love your videos. You are non-biased and provide information so everyone can make their own decision and that’s the way all these Videos should be. Thank you.

  • @miked5399
    @miked5399 Год назад +3

    Hey Gavin, my new (Dec 2022) Remington model 700 BDL in 7 rem mag came with a 1:8 twist AND Remington increased magazine length as well. I’m wondering if some of the other gun manufacturers will follow suit.

    • @guyminer3168
      @guyminer3168 Год назад

      That's terrific! I hope that they will.

  • @williamdiamond5400
    @williamdiamond5400 Год назад +4

    Used 7mmag for 30 years awesome cartridge !!
    I also have a 28 Nosler why settle for less like 7m PRC if it’s about power and no belt??

    • @otiscarlwhite8745
      @otiscarlwhite8745 Год назад +1

      Another 28 Nosler owner here that I shoot the 190 hybrid out of at 3145 mv, and it carries some weight out to about 1500 yards.

  • @brucerobson8341
    @brucerobson8341 Год назад +1

    I am 7MMguy, and have a 7WSM a 7Rem Mag and a 7 Dakota. I like the Idea of "non belted Magnums ", but the 7RM does it every time , and I can find factory ammo every where I go , so If I had to choose......the Remington Mag stays!

  • @chadbutler3277
    @chadbutler3277 Год назад +2

    I just bought a 7 PRC but I didn't have a 7 Rem Mag I had a 280 Rem that has been great but it is having a few problems but it has been my gun for 42 years. I'm very excited about the new 7PRC. I guess for hunting if you really think about it all the cartridges from 270 to 338 get the job done most of the time and it doesn't matter which one they go down with a. good shot and don't if you make a bad shot. So I say "Do what you want". I did!

  • @michaelellis5930
    @michaelellis5930 Год назад +7

    I'm seriously considering 7mm PRC for my next rifle, so it gets my vote. I currently shoot a 280 Ackley (1:9 barrel) because I consider it a better design than the 7mm Rem Mag, with nearly identical ballistics.

    • @WillyK51
      @WillyK51 Год назад

      Gaining a few 100 Fps over your 280AI. 168 grns bullets to small/light for the 280AI.? If a bit underpowered check the 28 Nosler

  • @aricwormsbecher2138
    @aricwormsbecher2138 Год назад +3

    It won't replace the 7 Rem mag because for the tens or hundreds of thousands of people already hunting with a 7rem mag there is no compelling reason to replace it with a 7PRC, which can't kill game any deader. That said if factory ammo is no concern the 7PRC is probably a better choice for a new rifle.

  • @davidthurman2267
    @davidthurman2267 Год назад

    Great video!

  • @RWeeks-hx9ut
    @RWeeks-hx9ut Год назад +1

    I love 7mms. I have a 7mm Rem Mag already, but I really want a 7 PRC! I really like that you can use a shorter barrel (I run a 26" on my 7mm RM) and I like that you can seat the bullets out further. I may have missed it, but did you have to lengthen the throat at all or just use the SAAMI spec?

  • @CARLPHILLY
    @CARLPHILLY Год назад +3

    I've owned a 7mm Rem Mag and I liked it. Loading my own, and normally staying within 200 yards, call me crazy all you want, but I'll stick with my 270 Winchester. I've never felt like I've needed more than the 270 for whitetail.

    • @guyminer3168
      @guyminer3168 Год назад +1

      For whitetail, you absolutely don't need anything more. The 270 Winchester is a most excellent cartridge capable of far more than some folks believe.

    • @manskull101-Clint
      @manskull101-Clint Год назад +2

      Oh yea I want 1 plus I'm liking that boyds stock

  • @Spruce-Bug
    @Spruce-Bug 10 месяцев назад +3

    There's be alot of 7m300wm iterations but the 7mm Practical is still an underrated powerhouse. Especially with the long remington magazines allowing max COAL length.

    • @steveelder5306
      @steveelder5306 7 месяцев назад

      do you mean a necked down Weatherbee?

    • @Spruce-Bug
      @Spruce-Bug 7 месяцев назад

      @@steveelder5306 no, 7mm Practical has a long neck dimension for case stretch and a broader shoulder dimension in the chamber to 0.491”. Much more easily usable than weatherby cartridges.

    • @steveelder5306
      @steveelder5306 7 месяцев назад

      cool thanks for the comeback@@Spruce-Bug

  • @sylviacandler5541
    @sylviacandler5541 Год назад +1

    Both have almost identical CC of water capacity few ever mention this. For a guy that Reloads, 26" barrel on 7 Mag, 3030-3050 with 175-180g bullets using R#26 with CCi 250's is the norm in several barrels of mine where groups are .375 and smaller. For a shorter range load, R#22 has a sweet spot in my 700s in 7 Mag at 2850 that simply opens up a single bullet hole. In one 28" 7 Rem mag, the 162-168 9T is 3200 fps shooting very tiny groups. I run Wyatt's mag boxes on my 700s that extends the OAL .125
    ergonomics for
    The vast majority of hunters will never see any real world need for the use of bullet weights over 168g, but past 1200 yards is where the 175-180g start to shine, and that number may be more like 1600 yards, depending on the game you are hunting.
    Again, the 7 PRC and 7 Remington Mag have equal powder capacities, a 7 Mashburn Super or 7 Practical would have been a more sensible choice. The 7 Mashburn is what the 7 Rem Mag should have been in the first place where the 162-168s do 3200 and never full length size with top end being 3350, now you are talking improved performance in Spades!
    For guys that do not reload, starting from scratch with neither cartridge on hand, the 7 PRC would be a hands down winner because much of the ammo produced has been dumbed down in the 7 Rem Mag never coming close to it's potential.

  • @americanhunteroutdoors8718
    @americanhunteroutdoors8718 Год назад +1

    I will always go with what's common and available even in hard times

  • @kayfrancisco7795
    @kayfrancisco7795 Год назад +3

    I’d go with the rem mag because you can get brass.

  • @DRHODES1979
    @DRHODES1979 Год назад +13

    Love the comparison! My vote is for the 7PRC. 7 Rem Mag is awesome, but if you're getting a new rifle why not get every bit of performance as possible. Gavin, would love to see more of these comparisons between older and newer cartridges! I think it would be an extremely interesting series. I would suggest however, including the ballistics out to 1000 yards as well as the wind drift for those ballistics tables. Thanks for the great content!

    • @John_Redcorn_
      @John_Redcorn_ Год назад +3

      IF you dont reload, the 7rm is the no-brainer choice. Prc ammo is insanely expensive and will always be more than the rem mag

    • @cbsbass4142
      @cbsbass4142 Год назад

      @@John_Redcorn_ Indeed. Remington has 7X57 Core Lokt in stock today, RIGHT NOW, but I won't order/buy it because they want $67 a box for it. I BUY $25 a box goods and hand load the brass.

    • @cbsbass4142
      @cbsbass4142 Год назад

      didn't they try that "every bit of performance" thing a while back with a funny looking cartridge called a .223 WSSM?

    • @DRHODES1979
      @DRHODES1979 Год назад

      @@cbsbass4142 We'll have to wait and see, but I'd bet a years salary that the 7 PRC sticks around a lot longer than any WSSM cartridge.

    • @cbsbass4142
      @cbsbass4142 Год назад +1

      @@DRHODES1979 I think you would be correct. It's certainly not a bad round. Just probably wouldn't sell my 7X57 to buy one. I just got it and it's a 2013 Shot Show Model 70 FW. Haven't had enough fun with it just yet. They didn't make that many in that caliber. :)

  • @srsatlaf4730
    @srsatlaf4730 11 месяцев назад +2

    I'm starting the 7's from scratch. I intend to get a 7 PRC. I want all the possible advantages of it even if I never use some of them.

  • @davecollins6113
    @davecollins6113 Год назад +5

    If t was my first venture into a magnum cartridge, I would buy a PRC, versatility is there on it, can also run lighter bullets to reduce recoil if wanted. Ran 160gr and 140gr 7mm for 40 yrs now, 160 does anything needed, 140 is also incredibly capable. For now, I'll stick with my 7-08, I have a 7RM, but, no big interest in using it, don't need to, I have other guns I like better than that one.

    • @garrytalley8009
      @garrytalley8009 6 месяцев назад

      Good choice. I like variety. The 7mm-08 is all one needs for deer hunting within the ranges people usually shoot them. It used to be my go-to rifle. I have many rifles and try to rotate them just to justify having them mostly. BTW I just ordered a 7mm PRC not because I needed it, just because I wanted it. Crazy me.

  • @kenmcvie6350
    @kenmcvie6350 Год назад +5

    My 7x61 S&H has a 1 in 8 twist especially to handle the heavy bullets. It seems to handle the 140gn at 3200 quite well also.

    • @guyminer2384
      @guyminer2384 Год назад +2

      Now that's a cartridge I haven't heard of in quite a while!

    • @billbennett9537
      @billbennett9537 Год назад

      Did you rebarrel a Shultz @Larsen rifle. I have one in 7x61 that my dad bought new over 60yrs ago.

    • @kenmcvie6350
      @kenmcvie6350 Год назад

      @@billbennett9537 no, it's a custom rifle I built up many years ago. Zastava Mauser action, Douglas 24" barrel, nice walnut stock, Burris 3x9 scope.

    • @billbennett9537
      @billbennett9537 Год назад +1

      @@kenmcvie6350 Always good to hear from another 7x61 aficionado. Sounds like a cool rig you have put together.

    • @kenmcvie6350
      @kenmcvie6350 Год назад

      @@billbennett9537 yes Bill I don't think there are many of us left!

  • @JOSHUAGROY
    @JOSHUAGROY Год назад +1

    always been a fan of the 7 rem mag but never had one. when the 7 prc came out i called my gunsmith and we started building one since i didnt already have a 7mm.

  • @pabloco091
    @pabloco091 10 месяцев назад +1

    I appreciate the standard action of the prc, wish more brass options were available.

  • @semperfi6288
    @semperfi6288 Год назад +3

    Yes, for the guy that wants to just plug and play, the 7mm PRC is the way to go. If you love to tinker with hand loading, 7mm Rem Mag all the way. I would be curious to see what happens over the next few years with the 7mm PRC. Great to see Guy and Gavin. Always great videos😁👍Kinda surprised that you guy's didn't test the 180 grain ELD Match.

    • @guyminer2384
      @guyminer2384 Год назад

      Thanks! Gavin loaded the 180 grain ELD Match. In his handloads and in Hornady's factory ammo, that 180 is seriously accurate!

    • @TrolloTV
      @TrolloTV Год назад

      Why would you get a 7mm rem mag for handloading if you don’t have one already? To my understanding, there’s literally nothing it does better than the PRC

    • @cbsbass4142
      @cbsbass4142 Год назад

      Given Hornady's History, they will discontinue another bullet, like Winchester does their Model 70s (They discontinued their best value "Sporter"). Of course, they are not made here anyway.

    • @scottcrawford3745
      @scottcrawford3745 Год назад

      @@TrolloTV If you're going to Hunt with it, 7mm Rem Mag will be available in almost every hunting outfitter store/ sporting goods store, and Walmart.
      Same goes for .270 Win, .30-06, 30-30 and .308 Win. (Most popular hunting cartridges in North America..)
      Good luck finding any 7PRC anywhere except a specialty store in a larger city. Loaded Ammo, Brass, Dies, Data... all will be slow in coming, and in short supply because it's the "new hotness".
      7PRC is mostly for PRS and ELR F-Class shooting. Like the .300 Norma, and the .338 Lapua, they were "adapted" for hunting applications after their target prowess became popular., but are unlikely to be too popular dues to their extreme cost, and specialized rifle actions.
      I took a bronze medal at 800 meters at the First F-class World Championships in 2002 in Ottawa, Canada, with a 28", 9-twist Lilja barreled 7 Rem Mag shooting 180gr Moly Berger VLD's @ 3000fps. . Nothing wrong with buying a 7 mag to reload it for hunting or target. You have so many bullets to choose from for so many kinds of target and hunting applications.
      For 90% of hunters, this new round is just reinventing the wheel. 7 Weatherby, 7 WSM, 7 Rem Long and Short Ultra mag, The old 7mm Mashburn, 7 x 61mm Sharp & Hart all did the same thing. Don't let Magnumitis cloud your judgement about the viability of "older" cartridges. All animals shot with a 7 Rem Mag today are just as dead as the ones it shot 60 years ago.

  • @craiglovelace1753
    @craiglovelace1753 Год назад +6

    Currently have several different rifles in 7mm……7 RM, 7SAUM, (4) 280 AI’s, 280 Rem, 7mm-08, 7x57, and a 7PRC. No matter how you slice it they all are great cartridges and have a spot in the big game woods. With that being said when I’m headed out for my Western Big Game Hunts I’m grabbing my SAUM, 280 AI’s or 7 PRC with a heavy bullet in the 168-180 gr range that can launch at 2900 FPS to 3000 FPS. I can see the 7PRC having an edge over the rest, especially for people that don’t reload and rely on factory ammo. You have to hand it to Hornady when it comes to case design and cartridge development they bring their product to market with all their ducks in a row! I see a long life ahead of the 7 PRC.

    • @johnnybarbar7435
      @johnnybarbar7435 Год назад

      Just plan on not eating out too often if you are a working class man and trying to feed a PRC factory ammo. Reloaders have it much easier when making the decision since PRC starts out at $90 and is as much as $130 per 20.

    • @craiglovelace1753
      @craiglovelace1753 Год назад

      @@johnnybarbar7435 my local Scheels has 7 PRC Hornady 175 gr ELD-X for $54.99 a box, Hornady 6.5 PRC for $46.99 a box. Granted Nosler Factory ammo starts around $90 per box in 6.5 and 300 PRC. I’m sure location dictates pricing. As far as reloaders having it easier, the last 3 years have been an absolute nightmare when it comes to component availability and cost. If I hadn’t been a reloader for the last 30 years I sure wouldn’t start now, as you could buy a lot of factory ammo to feed a rifle for the cost of components to reload.

    • @johnnybarbar7435
      @johnnybarbar7435 Год назад +1

      @@craiglovelace1753 I guess it just depends on one's shooting volume when making the reloading decision.

    • @cbsbass4142
      @cbsbass4142 Год назад

      @@johnnybarbar7435 I just checked. Whenever Midway gets any Outfitter Copper in (only) 160 grain) you can get it for $60 a box. Still too rich for my blood. I can get 6 Filet Mignons cheaper at the butcher. :)

    • @cbsbass4142
      @cbsbass4142 Год назад +1

      @@craiglovelace1753 I'm still gonna reload if I have to order Cast Lead Bullets from Rim Rock. I can feed my 32 winchester special for $46 for 200 bullets

  • @robbiefletcher2066
    @robbiefletcher2066 Год назад +2

    I have a 7 rem mag but the 7 PRC is very tempting

  • @rodgerthackeray7978
    @rodgerthackeray7978 Год назад +1

    Bergara needs to start chambering for the 7PRC. When they do, I will buy a few for my boys.

  • @RT-gv6us
    @RT-gv6us Год назад +3

    Here is my Balanced Response: On one hand I would LOVE to ditch the belt the 7mm RM has and I feel the 7mm PRC is every bit as good as they say. On the other hand, I am going to wait and see if brass manufacturers start producing brass for it. I got online again today and still can't find brass available. I am not interested in buying a gun that I cannot find brass for. Hopefully that will change over the next year.

    • @Toldyaso1216
      @Toldyaso1216 Год назад +1

      Word is that brass should start showing around end of summer/early fall. Not unusual for brass on a new cartridge to be basically unavailable for most of the first year. It's all being dedicated to Hornady factory ammunition right now.

  • @drewmartin9489
    @drewmartin9489 Год назад +3

    Love the content! Currently building a 7PRC. Would love to see a comparison between the 300 RUM and the 300 PRC.

  • @kiltman11
    @kiltman11 Год назад +1

    I just started a Tikka T3 7PRC build so I'm really hoping this round catches fire.

  • @salvatorecosentino1526
    @salvatorecosentino1526 Год назад +2

    I agree with you both and others in the comments regarding the improvements of the & PRC, however as you said, currently Hornady is the only one making brass, so availability wise, for now, the 7 RM might be the way to go. Rifle manufacturers should take notice and consider offering 7 RM with a 1:8 barrel. I would like you in future videos discuss cost of factory and reloaded ammo comparison (reloading cost comparison with cartridge components only)? I appreciate the info in your videos.

    • @garrytalley8009
      @garrytalley8009 6 месяцев назад

      If you don't shoot a lot of bullets reloading is not a cheap proposition. I have many rifles and reload for most all of them. It takes a while to recover the cost of the reloading equipment. If you don't reload enough, you won't even recover enough in the savings to pay for your dies. I do enjoy it and have fun when making a good load that shoots well in my rifle. But after you purchase different powders and bullets and do what it takes to develop a load you have not saved a dime. In fact, it costs you more money. Just a fact of life. Reloading often costs more money. Some people are good at it and can get good results in short order but not without investing in a number of different powders, bullets primers and all it takes to put them together with. I do this and it is a joke to try and think one saves money. In the end you can say what the cost is of the bullets that you have developed but you are leaving out the cost of developing it and all the inventory of all the components you had to buy to make them. It's still cost even if it's on the shelf. It may offset prices down the road in development but if you never use the components, it's a cost you spent to make those bullets. Reloading is like owning a boat if you need to ask the cost you can't afford it.

  • @JohnBrown-mh9ii
    @JohnBrown-mh9ii Год назад +3

    No doubt the new shorter fatter cases with higher BC bullets are proving to be best choice for many reasons. Efficiency, inherently more accurate, less recoil in most cases. I just wish ammunition manufacturers would get moving and offer more choices and more supply.

  • @stevenallen8357
    @stevenallen8357 Год назад +3

    If I didn't already have a 7 Rem Mag, I might consider a 7 PRC. I would wait to see if the PRC is going to be another fad cartridge that fades quickly. I shoot enough wildcats, and odd balls that adding one more would not be that big of a deal. I have an old 1st gen Ruger 77 long action with tang safety that I had PacNor rebarrel (after truing the action) with a 31" 1-9.5 twist medium Palma super match barrel. I rarely shoot past 300 yards, and will pass on shots that are farther than I am certain of hitting the critter in the vitals. I am a physically disabled veteran and cannot walk (or run) like I used to in the Army. I take a comfy seat (not worried much about rifle weight or length as I am not humping it in the bush) and wait for something to walk into range. I have to keep in mind my physical limitations when I go to retrieve a dead critter. I will not shoot something if I cannot recover it later.