So, I've got a prairie dog hunt scheduled for May (about 2 months out from time of writing) and I'm trying to decide what caliber to bring. I'd like to take ~1,000 rounds with me for 3 days of shooting but the question is of what?
My rifle (built on a lefty Impact 737r) currently has a 6.5 Creedmoor barrel on it. Initially, I thought I'd just pick up a .223 barrel as brass and components are relatively cheap. Only problem is, I'm having trouble sourcing a left-handed .223 bolt for my action...
Having been 6mm-curious for a while, I got to thinking about finally jumping on the 6mm Dasher bandwagon (with the help of the Hide's input). It'll be a steep initial investment to purchase 1,000 pieces of brass, but then I'd be set for a while.
So my question is, would a barrel chambered for the typical 105-109 grain projectiles work well at all for the lighter varmint bullets? From what I've been reading, the longer pills like ~.125" freebore, whereas the shorter (secant ogive?) varmint bullets like little-to-no freebore?
Is this a bad idea or am I just over-thinking it?
My rifle (built on a lefty Impact 737r) currently has a 6.5 Creedmoor barrel on it. Initially, I thought I'd just pick up a .223 barrel as brass and components are relatively cheap. Only problem is, I'm having trouble sourcing a left-handed .223 bolt for my action...
Having been 6mm-curious for a while, I got to thinking about finally jumping on the 6mm Dasher bandwagon (with the help of the Hide's input). It'll be a steep initial investment to purchase 1,000 pieces of brass, but then I'd be set for a while.
So my question is, would a barrel chambered for the typical 105-109 grain projectiles work well at all for the lighter varmint bullets? From what I've been reading, the longer pills like ~.125" freebore, whereas the shorter (secant ogive?) varmint bullets like little-to-no freebore?
Is this a bad idea or am I just over-thinking it?