I don't monitor passing ships much, so I recently reestablished the 308 within my collection after going on two decades of using the .260 as my preferred LR rifle. The reason being that at the time I reentered the 308 market I was getting up some steam to add F T/R to the F Open I'd been shooting with the 260. I bought a nearly identical pair of Savage 11VT rifles chambered in 5.56 and 308 respectively, and tricked them out with better stocks, high magnification scopes and such, picking my options from column B and ending up with some capable rifles at rather economical cost.
After shooting a National Level F T/R 600yd match with the 5.56, I had a second heart attack two months later, and the wise money has me retiring from serious competition afterward. Disappointing, but I definitely love the guns, and since I love the load development process, I'll be having fun with them for the foreseeable future. I would not consider them for hunting with any strategy besides the stationary hunting approach. They are just too heavy to tote about on a regular basis.
As it happens, my favorite hunting rifle also turned to to be a winning deer rifle match gun, and also took a 4th overall in a state sniper championships in 1997. It's a Win Model 70 30-06 Featherweight, 22 inches of factory sporter weight barrel, and all I can say is that they must have moaned sweetly/weirdly and waved the chicken's foot over it as it went out Winchester's door. Helluva shooter with 168gr 30-06 FGMM. These days it's harvesting deer in bunches for my Daughter and Son-in-Law.
Gotta suggest that a do-all, best of all rifle concept is no stranger to this site. It's been debated and snarled over for well over a decade. If the animal exists, it's very well concealed. The best of the outcomes turn out to be compromises, which I was told is defined as something that does nothing all that admirably. Seriously, consider two rifles with specific adaptations to A) the lighter weight, more manageable hunter, and B) the hefty brawler LR precision pill chucker.
I have several seasons of 1000yd competition under me, and it's no game for a hunting rifle; the ammunition that will work out there will beat you near to death in a lightweight rifle.
Doing some load development with the .308 and Hornady 178 ELD-X is a dream project of mine, no magic elixir 308/178 load has yet appeared; but it will. I really believe I'll have more luck with the 168SMK/165SGK fraternal twins in 308, as was most definitely the situation with the 30-06. While it's probably possible to get 30-06 performance out of the 308, it's tougher on the 308, and my bets are off beyond 800yd.
The "800yd death veil" means less to me at 4200ft altitude than it would to those lesser beings infesting the lower altitudes; on paper, the168SMK launched at 2700fps is still transsonic at 1000yd, up here near Olympus where I live. Theya Fowah, the 308 is still every much as good a performer today as it ever was; it's just been overtaken by some newer alternatives.
You're gonna need ammunition in the 175gr-ish category (308FGMM2 Federal Gold Medal Match 2) to play nice out at 1000yd, and when it gets out there, some of those newer youngster chamberings will be lying in the tall grass, waiting for that golden opportunity to savage the oldster 308. Do you need to be a better shooter at 1000yd with the 308? Some would say yes; but truthfully, my response would be that everyone who plays out there needs to bring their best game.
I'm getting the vibe that handloading is not in your repertoire just yet and not highly anticipated, either. Not a fatal flaw, Hornady and Federal match and hunting choices will serve you quite well.
Best fortune, Newling.
Greg