Ahh, but it does matter:
I have chambered a lot of barrels in 6mm Competition Match. I also make dies for it. So, I'm biased. Here goes:
If your end game is great performance with the lowest path of resistance, go with the Creedmoor. It'll do all it claims. The Competition Match begins to outshine other 6's when we start figuring end game costs, downtime with barrel changes, and pushing 107+ grain projectiles to the velocity limits set by plate match hosts.
2500 to 3000 round service life is very, very, very possible and realistic with the Competition Match. I've tracked this data for half a decade now. It's real.
Sterling accuracy. Out of the (pick a number) that we've chambered, none have ever come back with an accuracy complaint. Excellent brass life. If you know how to reload, you can expect 10+ cycles on your brass.
The rub. First, you have some work to do. Rather than regurgitate it here, I've written a detailed article on it:
https://www.longriflesinc.com/blogs/...petition-match
So, a little work is involved. I would avoid neck turning at all costs. I'd rather play in the street with a dull razor than neck turn brass.
X1000 if you're going to compete with this thing in a plate match.
Looking at this from the accounting perspective:
A Creed will typically run to around 1200 rounds with a heavy 6mm bullet and loaded with a powder like 4350. For sake of argument we will say you start with 1000 pieces of brass at $.90 each. We'll speculate that you get 10 reloads out of it before it tanks the primer pocket. Ignoring cost of bullets, powder, primers.
10,000 rounds total. (1000x10 reloads)
10,000 rounds / 1200 round service life on barrel ='s 9 barrels (8.3)
Barrel costs $330 (average blank)
Fitup: $325
Threaded muzzle: +$100
Add this up, were at $7695.00 for all the barrels, cycling that lot of brass 10 times, and all the machine work to fit it up. Works out to .77 cents each time you pull the trigger. (again, ignoring cost of bullets, powder, and primers)
Comp Match comparison:
Same 1000 pieces of brass at .90/ea
Same 10 reloads. . .
2700 round service life on barrel (average)
barrel cost, same
Machine work, same
Now we're at a total of $3820 or .38 cents per round. A reduction of 49% in costs.
What I'm factoring here isn't often discussed. The consumables like bullets, powder, and primers are relatively fixed. They are going to cost about the same regardless of what cartridge you use. The performance level of the cartridge however drives the expiration date on things like the barrel and brass life. Granted, there are a number of influencing factors in this. How aggressive you load, the cyclic rate on the gun when shooting, etc... Trying to anticipate that and quantify it into a cost really isn't all that practical in a PRS type format shooting event. It's just too dynamic.
With all that, the math does not lie. If you're expendable free time allows it, the Competition Match does have some advantages. If you just can't devote the effort to doing the grunt work in the reloading room, then the Creedmoor becomes very attractive as the ammo is easy to source.
Other concerns/topics like how it feeds, extracts, etc is a non issue. On a properly setup rifle both run to the standard. The 6mm Comp Match is not an Ackley. AI cartridges have a more aggressive shoulder angle (40*) and they remove almost all of the body taper on the case walls. It's worth about a 8-12 percent increase in velocity over the parent cartridge. Its often at the expense of feeding and extraction. They can be little a holes at times to run fluently in both internal box and centerfeed magazines.
The Comp Match has a less aggressive shoulder and the body taper stays at the same rate as the original cartridge. This makes the feeding and extraction just as efficient as the parent case. The argument over shoulder angle, neck length, and how much better/worse is not something I can comment on. The research I've done on it does not seem very conclusive. Its another case of just keep looking till you find the answer you want...
Hope this helps.
C.