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You’ll still learn wind. 6.5 isn’t some magic round. It requires less wind hold which will translate into more hits which will translate into more shooting and less frustration. Someone will come along and agree with you, no doubt. Regardless you will learn wind eventually, just one way might be more fun along the way.Thank you for the reply. Please tell me if I’m thinking of things wrong but if 6.5 is “easier” then would it be more beneficial for someone to start with .308? That way i will learn to read the wind since it doesn’t buck the wind as good?
You’ll still learn wind. 6.5 isn’t some magic round. It requires less wind hold which will translate into more hits which will translate into more shooting and less frustration. Someone will come along and agree with you, no doubt. Regardless you will learn wind eventually, just one way might be more fun along the way.
Guys shooting 6mm cartridges can’t spot their hits beyond 800yds without a Hensoldt either.I started out in 6.5, now I have both. I like them both but give a decisive advantage to the Creedmoor. The lower recoil allows me to spot hits/misses more easily. Guys shooting the 6mm cartridges say it is even easier.
Just cause the chunky nerd gets it done doesn't mean you can't have the prom queenI'd say 308 because EVERYONE is on the 6.5 kick and it makes the 308 cheaper from the start. Some very nice 308's are being looked over because of this "fad". Sometimes the chunky nerdy girl gets the job done nicely.
I agree but just not at Xmas time.Just cause the chunky nerd gets it done doesn't mean you can't have the prom queen
Damnit. I thought all the 6.5 is a “fad” people made their way to Facebook.I'd say 308 because EVERYONE is on the 6.5 kick and it makes the 308 cheaper from the start. Some very nice 308's are being looked over because of this "fad". Sometimes the chunky nerdy girl gets the job done nicely.
The chunky nerdy girl grows up to be a hottie sometimes...that's 6.5 now; whereas, .308 is the old high school queen whose looks have long faded.I'd say 308 because EVERYONE is on the 6.5 kick and it makes the 308 cheaper from the start. Some very nice 308's are being looked over because of this "fad". Sometimes the chunky nerdy girl gets the job done nicely.
Long range to me will be out to about 800 yards and I will be trying to do it all from steel on the range to hunting deer out to 5-600 yards maybe longer one day.What is "long range" to you? Are you going to be shooting past 600 yards? Field use or range use?
Agree 100%You’ll still learn wind. 6.5 isn’t some magic round. It requires less wind hold which will translate into more hits which will translate into more shooting and less frustration. Someone will come along and agree with you, no doubt. Regardless you will learn wind eventually, just one way might be more fun along the way.
If money is a factor, you can get a mildly used .308 bolt-action rifle for a good price; the gun market is flooded with mildly used .308 rifles that trend-following gun owners have sold. Spend less money on buying the actual rifle and more money on target practice.
If money isn't a factor, get either one. .308 requires more wind and elevation adjustment compared to 6.5 cm, but it's still a very accurate cartridge within 1000 yards. 6.5cm has a much lighter recoil. The ballistic advantages of 6.5 cm really only become relevant when you get into high-level competition (PRS). If you're new to long range shooting, you've got a lot of work and training to go through before you get to that point. The ability of a new shooter to hit a 700 yard target has less to do with the choice of cartridge (comparing 6.5 cm to .308) and more to do with ammo selection, platform build quality, and shooter proficiency.
If you're looking for an all-around, utilitarian round (ie capable of hunting big game and plinking steel), I think .308 has an advantage over 6.5 cm, though the 6.5 cm is capable of taking certain game given the appropriate ammunition.
The 6.5 bullets will go farther, and are competitive beyond 1,000 yds. 6.5 hunting bullets deliver more energy at longer range than .308.
Thank you for the reply. I have a .308 and a .223 trainer so I think I’m going to stick with that with your advice. I was going to trade my .308 for a 6.5 CM but I think I’m not going to and shoot the he’ll out of the .308 win. I appreciate everyone’s input into this. Thank you againstarting out shooting 308 no brainer.
we cut our teeth on it either in the service or by buying our own.
there are volumes of books written on load development and such that arent just inter web crap.
factory match ammo is better than you can handload, made by several large companies not smaller job shops that might vanish.
and using factory match175gr sierra will get you to 1000 and hit iron maidens with regularity.
plus the barrel life has 1000's of rounds more life.
you can shoot 100 rounds per week every week for almost 2 years and the barrel will still shoot.
i have a AI in 308 that has over 7000 rounds through it and still groups under a inch at 100 and hits 17 x 11" maidens at 1000. factory ammo not handloaded stuff.
6.5 is a great round no doubt but not my choice to start.
some will say that it shoots "inside" the 308 which is true, but if thats the case then you will be chasing the best performing round not learning the craft.
shooting a 308 and then going to a better performing round is like a vacation, going from a laser to a mortar when you think you have it figured out is a disaster. seen it several times.
if not stuck with those 2, get a 223. almost free to shoot ammo price wise and you can find bolt guns and semi auto AR's, you can switch platforms if you want in the future and not have to learn the ballistics from scratch or buy new/different ammo.
a 22" bushmaster or dpms with a bull barrel will shoot under 1" with match ammo with your eyes closed. that accuracy is good enough for learning exterior ballistics. and a 223 will get you 700 easy.
grab a shorty upper for few hundred bucks and go play with surplus ammo when you want.