by orhunter » Tue Jun 22, 2021 9:24 am
I don’t own any rifle chambered for what would be considered a modern cartridge. Here’s the list.
.250 Savage, 1915
.257 Roberts, 1934
.22 Hornet, 1930
Super .30, 1925. AKA, .300 H&H
.338-‘06AI, late 50’s
.35 Whelen, 1922
I shot a friends big 7 when the first hit the market. My impression was, although it was head stamped Mag., it was very pleasant to shoot. Everyone jumped on the cartridge for elk with mixed results. The problem wasn’t the cartridge, it was the bullets. That’s been fixed which allows the 7 to shine.
If I were to get down to two rifles, the .250 and .300 would be my picks to keep.
What makes some of these cartridges unpopular is factory ammo. The .250 was developed for the Model 99. Had it been developed around a good bolt action first, it would have made the .257 obsolete before it hit the market. Had the .257 been developed with good powders and bullets which weren’t in existence at the time, it would have made the .25-‘06 obsolete. Not that anyone needs 3200 fps with a good .25 cal. 100 gr. deer bullet, the .250 does it with ease. As does the .257 to 3400 fps with same (deer) bullets. I built the .250 to shoot 110 gr. Accubonds which come out @ 3100 fps. The .257 for the 115 gr. Partition but I haven’t completed chronograph testing so don’t know what I’ll get. I’ll be happy with 3150 fps.
SARCASM, one of the many free services I offer