7mm WSM - Your thoughts.....
#21
I was gonna say the small block motor has replaced the big block motors in racecars for years because the power is about the same but the weight savings and the cars handle better, put it over.
#22
#24
Typical Buck
Join Date: Aug 2007
Posts: 749
#25
Giant Nontypical
Join Date: Oct 2013
Posts: 9,230
7mm Rem Mag isn't broke so there was no reason to "fix" it by doing the whole WSM treatment. I've shot a 7mm Rem since I was 14. My brother shoots one, my late grandfather shot one, my late father shot one and none of them needed "improving".
It was a brilliant marketing concept and helped sell a lot of rifles but 100-200 fps from any 2 different rifles of the exact same caliber don't make a bit of difference in the performance on either game or targets.
It was a brilliant marketing concept and helped sell a lot of rifles but 100-200 fps from any 2 different rifles of the exact same caliber don't make a bit of difference in the performance on either game or targets.
#26
Typical Buck
Join Date: May 2009
Location: Colorado
Posts: 797
In a lot of cases building superior long range accuracy is better in a larger case thus being able to use a slower burning powder and a longer barrel. The major bonus is the bigger case and slower burning powder builds it's pressure as it burns down the barrel behind the bullet. The smaller case and faster burning powder has it's pressure build in half the time and a lot of the pressure is right there on the chamber. Compare the two and you'll find the 7mm Rem mag can reach same velocity's with 5,000-7,000 less psi. It's just more efficient if you look at it the other way. A magnum in a 22" barrel is a waste of powder in the first place. Minimum would be 26" barrel for a magnum .338 and smaller. Makes no since to compare apples to apples unless you use something it can gain full potential from.
#28
In a lot of cases building superior long range accuracy is better in a larger case thus being able to use a slower burning powder and a longer barrel. The major bonus is the bigger case and slower burning powder builds it's pressure as it burns down the barrel behind the bullet. The smaller case and faster burning powder has it's pressure build in half the time and a lot of the pressure is right there on the chamber. Compare the two and you'll find the 7mm Rem mag can reach same velocity's with 5,000-7,000 less psi. It's just more efficient if you look at it the other way. A magnum in a 22" barrel is a waste of powder in the first place. Minimum would be 26" barrel for a magnum .338 and smaller. Makes no since to compare apples to apples unless you use something it can gain full potential from.
The 6.5-.284 also seems to discredit that way of thinking as well being a darling of the long-range accuracy bunch while using what would be seen as one of the very first SM type cases, along with the .350RM & 6.5RM. Matter of fact, the 6.5-.284 has almost identical case capacity as the 6.5RM (which should probably now be called the 6.5 RSM )