wildcats
#1
Thread Starter
Nontypical Buck
Joined: Feb 2003
Posts: 3,393
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From: Western Nebraska
I'm trying to get rid of my wildcats. One is a 6 X 45 on a mini-mauser and one is a .243 superrockchucker.
I plan to rechamber the .243 SRC to .243 Winchester after shortening the barrel 2" at the breach and just rebarreling the 6 X 45 to either .204 or .223. I'm just tired of wildcats.....
Anyone out there like wildcats?...which ones?...why?
I plan to rechamber the .243 SRC to .243 Winchester after shortening the barrel 2" at the breach and just rebarreling the 6 X 45 to either .204 or .223. I'm just tired of wildcats.....
Anyone out there like wildcats?...which ones?...why?
#2
Senior Member
Joined: Jan 2004
Posts: 1,813
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From:
At one time just about all i thought about were "wildcats". I designed several and sold them through my shop, so i have to mention them. I made them from RCBS basic cases, shortened and necked to .338, .375 and .416. I sold mostly the .375's asa 375 craze was on where i lived.
Why did i do that? Because i was selling a lot of Valmet 412's and several of my customers wanted a combi and double rifle in a big rimmed case of about .375 H&H performance.
In the 70's i figured the ultimate cartridge was the .338-06, so i had (3) of them made up. (actually two and an extra bbl.) I was liveing in Alaskaand igot the idea that.33 cal.. would be all the power i'd ever need. Anyway, for quite a while following building one on a 700 Rem. LH action with a european walnut stock, i harvested one heck of a lot of meat for my freezer with it. Of course since thenthe .338-06 hasbeen chambered in a factory rifle and lost it's "wildcat" status.
The why for me on that one is, i could use a std. action that would hold 5 rounds total, and get plenty of performance in a 22" bbl, all without magnum recoil. Also i didn't have to carry around something as heavy as a 375 H&H to get that power!! I still have the custom gun i had made up in this cal., and also the extra bbl..
Another wildcat i always liked is, a 9.3x74R imp.. Of course all i did was the "imp" part of it. I can fire factory 9.3x74R's in it, or load the thenonce fired brass to a muchhigher V for a flatter shooting round with more energy.
Wildcats never bothered me. Just make up50 or so rounds of brass, work up a load and dial in the rifle. Once that's done, make up another 100 rounds of brass, and load that "good" hunting load with NP's and have many years of excelent shooting!!
I've owned and made up plenty more wildcats, but the ones above are the ones that stick in my mind right now.
Drilling Man
Why did i do that? Because i was selling a lot of Valmet 412's and several of my customers wanted a combi and double rifle in a big rimmed case of about .375 H&H performance.
In the 70's i figured the ultimate cartridge was the .338-06, so i had (3) of them made up. (actually two and an extra bbl.) I was liveing in Alaskaand igot the idea that.33 cal.. would be all the power i'd ever need. Anyway, for quite a while following building one on a 700 Rem. LH action with a european walnut stock, i harvested one heck of a lot of meat for my freezer with it. Of course since thenthe .338-06 hasbeen chambered in a factory rifle and lost it's "wildcat" status.
The why for me on that one is, i could use a std. action that would hold 5 rounds total, and get plenty of performance in a 22" bbl, all without magnum recoil. Also i didn't have to carry around something as heavy as a 375 H&H to get that power!! I still have the custom gun i had made up in this cal., and also the extra bbl..
Another wildcat i always liked is, a 9.3x74R imp.. Of course all i did was the "imp" part of it. I can fire factory 9.3x74R's in it, or load the thenonce fired brass to a muchhigher V for a flatter shooting round with more energy.
Wildcats never bothered me. Just make up50 or so rounds of brass, work up a load and dial in the rifle. Once that's done, make up another 100 rounds of brass, and load that "good" hunting load with NP's and have many years of excelent shooting!!
I've owned and made up plenty more wildcats, but the ones above are the ones that stick in my mind right now.
Drilling Man
#3
I'm real keen on many of the Ackley Improved cartidges - I guess they are not really a "wildcat" since you can shoot factory ammunition in them while fire forming. P.O. Ackley's shop was not very far from here and he taught at the Trinidad College. I currently own a .22-250 Ackley, a .25-06 Ackley, and .270 Ackley. All are the 40 degree version. I have also built them in .223, .243, 6MM Rem, .257 Roberts, .280 Rem, .308 Win,30/06, and .338-06. All of them will deliver around 200 fps more speed than the parent caliber - but the biggest advantage, IMO, is that the cases shrink a little when fire forming; and then don't really need trimming after that. I hate case trimming. Roscoe
#4
Joined: Feb 2005
Posts: 592
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From:
Just look through the period of time,the once wildcats became,standard type cartridges. As far as wildcats,my first one was a 22 K Chuck or k hornet as it was called. Next was a 30 Gibbs,219 Zipper Ackley imp,6mmMoto Mag.,17 Ackley Bee,17-223,223Ackley imp. They are fun,and thats the truth.One cartridge i want to build up let i think is a super cartridge and a lot of 600-1000 yd shooters use here is the 6.5mm x 284. Its got some dandy ballistics to it.and makes a super hunting rifle. vangunsmith




