243 or 6.5x55 or 270 please help
#11
Thread Starter
Spike
Joined: Oct 2013
Posts: 4
Likes: 0
Thank you so much for your posts..
I don't know, the voices in my head are telling me "get the suede get the suede get the suede" and I will be ordering one in Sako 85 Hunter tomorrow...
Something about the Suede I don't know I just like the idea of having one.
Unfortunately I will not be buying another calibre for the next 10 years or so,that's why I going for quality guns not for quantity... 3 is max I can afford at this stage !
And yes we do camel shooting in South Australia and Buffalo in Northern Territory.
The 270 has a sharp recoil and I think it is too close to 308... I was going to get the 270 initially instead of the 308 but all my friends said DON'T...
308 is very popular in Australia way more than 270 and 30.06 which I also was told to stay away from 30.06
I know that the 30.06 is very popular in the USA...
Is it true that the 243 is a barrel burner????
I don't know, the voices in my head are telling me "get the suede get the suede get the suede" and I will be ordering one in Sako 85 Hunter tomorrow...
Something about the Suede I don't know I just like the idea of having one.
Unfortunately I will not be buying another calibre for the next 10 years or so,that's why I going for quality guns not for quantity... 3 is max I can afford at this stage !
And yes we do camel shooting in South Australia and Buffalo in Northern Territory.
The 270 has a sharp recoil and I think it is too close to 308... I was going to get the 270 initially instead of the 308 but all my friends said DON'T...
308 is very popular in Australia way more than 270 and 30.06 which I also was told to stay away from 30.06
I know that the 30.06 is very popular in the USA...
Is it true that the 243 is a barrel burner????
#12
Simply put, no. No moreso than your .22-250 at least, which, also, is not a "barrel burner".
If a hunter ever honestly burns up a barrel, then they've spent enough hunting that they could easily have rebarreled or bought a new rifle.
If a hunter ever honestly burns up a barrel, then they've spent enough hunting that they could easily have rebarreled or bought a new rifle.
#13
Nontypical Buck
Joined: Feb 2003
Posts: 3,476
Likes: 0
From: Michigan
I don't know much about he 22-250 compared to my experience with the other 2. I have both a .243 and several 6.5 X 55's.
I'd give you the nod for the Swede. Your 22-250 will throw pills up to 80 grains, the 243 throws stuff from 70-115, and the Swede load pills from 85 grains to 160. Not all bullet weights will do favorably in just any barrel/twist. And of course I might have the same barrel as you and get different results. Guns can be particular.
Your 22-250 may like a certain weight bullet and a 243 and Swede likely will too ... depends on your twists ... but the 243 has a smaller window of bullet weights it'll handle well ... 55 grains to 115 and likely it'll do best in the 70-100 gr realm.
By comparison a Swede will be able to throw bullets from 85 grains to 160 with the sweet spot being in the 120 - 160 grain realm.
I'd opt for the Swede to give you a better spread of bullet weights and applications.
I'd give you the nod for the Swede. Your 22-250 will throw pills up to 80 grains, the 243 throws stuff from 70-115, and the Swede load pills from 85 grains to 160. Not all bullet weights will do favorably in just any barrel/twist. And of course I might have the same barrel as you and get different results. Guns can be particular.
Your 22-250 may like a certain weight bullet and a 243 and Swede likely will too ... depends on your twists ... but the 243 has a smaller window of bullet weights it'll handle well ... 55 grains to 115 and likely it'll do best in the 70-100 gr realm.
By comparison a Swede will be able to throw bullets from 85 grains to 160 with the sweet spot being in the 120 - 160 grain realm.
I'd opt for the Swede to give you a better spread of bullet weights and applications.
#15
Spike
Joined: Oct 2013
Posts: 6
Likes: 0
From: Ambridge, PA
I'm aware of the 3 caliber deal. But don't count out the 260 Rem.
Its a pleasure to shoot and its flat trajectory is a plus. It beats out the swede by +/- 100fps with a milder recoil. My Sako in 260 Rem (rebarreled .308) is an amazing medium game stopper. I own 2 Sakos, one in 260 Rem, one in 7mmRM. I dig those Sakos.
If I were buying from your caliber selection, the 270 Win. would be the go-to in my opinion. Proven game stopper here in the US.
Recoil is tolerable, and can bag groundhogs to elk. I would say it bridges a few gaps.
Its a pleasure to shoot and its flat trajectory is a plus. It beats out the swede by +/- 100fps with a milder recoil. My Sako in 260 Rem (rebarreled .308) is an amazing medium game stopper. I own 2 Sakos, one in 260 Rem, one in 7mmRM. I dig those Sakos.
If I were buying from your caliber selection, the 270 Win. would be the go-to in my opinion. Proven game stopper here in the US.
Recoil is tolerable, and can bag groundhogs to elk. I would say it bridges a few gaps.
#18
Nontypical Buck
Joined: Jul 2007
Posts: 2,178
Likes: 0
From: Southeast Missouri
I really love my Browning A-bolt Hunter in the .243 and highly reccomend it...but a 6.5 will have more knock down power as mentioned and have a larger choice of grain bullets to choose from.Another good caliber choice would be a 7mm-08!
#20
Giant Nontypical
Joined: Oct 2013
Posts: 9,230
Likes: 0
I've owned all 3. The only one I still own is the 6.5x55. The effectiveness of that long skinny bullet is amazing. Plus you can get heavier bullets if you want. The heaviest I've seen for .243 was 105 gr and the heaviest I've seen for .270 is 150 gr. The Swede has bullets up to 160 Gr. Plus they have a higher sectional density which helps give deep, straight line penetration on game. The Swede is still common in Scandinavia for moose.


