Rebarreling... what to do, what to do....

Beepy

Sergeant
Full Member
Minuteman
Nov 18, 2008
156
0
The Northwest Mountains
So, got Savage 10 SA sitting around that needs a barrel.

I have been shooting longer ranges for a while now, but I have decided to dedicate one rifle to hunting. I only have the one action to play with, so that limits me really to short action rounds. I am pretty sure I can get a 300 WSM to work, and that is the direction I am thinking of heading, I just wanted to bounce it off you guys to see if there were any cartridges I missed.

I live and hunt where longer, cross canyon shots on elk happen frequently. So this is what I have in mind for the end game. Basically, a good long range cartridge with the most retained energy for penetration....

So what have I missed?
 
Re: Rebarreling... what to do, what to do....

Here's the bolt head you'll need to use if it's not already a mag bolt face on there.

http://www.midwayusa.com/viewProduct/?productNumber=866933

You will probably need to have the magwell massaged for proper feeding. If it's a centerfeed action it will be easier to make it handle that stubby, fat case easier.

Don't limit yourself to a 300 WSM, the 7mm WSM or 7/300 WSM are both excellent choices with good bullet selection for both hunting and target shooting.

If you're not a reloader already, either plan to start or plan to shoot a lot less for your given budget. Factory ammo for the WSM's isn't cheap.
 
Re: Rebarreling... what to do, what to do....

<div class="ubbcode-block"><div class="ubbcode-header">Originally Posted By: bward</div><div class="ubbcode-body">I would go with the 300 wsm over the 7 wsm on a dedicated hunting rifle. You can get larger grained bullets in 300 wsm that will have more energy. </div></div>

Until what range? Neither is bad, but just because a bullet is heavier doesn't mean it will retain more energy at distance.
 
Re: Rebarreling... what to do, what to do....

Agreed with Bohem. 7mm has some of the highest BC Bullets available for a short action, Especially if you plan on shooting at 500+ yards. Not downing the 30 cal because it is also one hell of a round, but for energy/accuracy, I know more guys going in the 7mm direction. You will sacrifice velocity with the higher grain bullets in the 300WSM which down range, at a long enough distance, it would be better to go with 7mm. Both are great cartriges and will most likely serve you well, just adding to Bohems comment.
 
Re: Rebarreling... what to do, what to do....

Reloading is no problem... It may be my favorite part of LR shooting (helps ya know with the OCD...;)

Had thought slightly of the 7mm in some wild cat cases, I guess I have never looked at that as close since I am very comfy with 30 cal.

I guess I have to run some numbers

Already have a magnum bolt face to swap in, and it is off a savage 10fp center feed. I checked, and the 300 WSM will fit the rails, but the mag will need some tweaking, though with a center feed I guess I could find a native 300 WSM mag and it should fit no problems...
 
Re: Rebarreling... what to do, what to do....

+1 for 7mm

Another option is to post a WTT either here or over on Savageshooters.com and see if someone has a LA they would trade you. That would open up a few possibilities for other rounds in the same size caliber that would give you better barrel life than a short mag. Such as 280 AI. Just a thought. And for the record I wish I had your problem here in Ohio! No 500 yard elk shots going on around here!
 
Re: Rebarreling... what to do, what to do....

I would look for 300 WSM Mag before modifying, but as far as I know(I could be wrong) Savage doesn't offer 300WSM or any Magnums for that matter, in a DBM set-up. So you will most likely have to modify the magazine. But if that is all you have to do to have a DBM Magnum Savage then I would do it because personally, that's just too cool. Nobody will have that. My girlfriends Dad has a model 12 300WSM and he has never had any problems with it feeding rounds, but it's not a DBM set-up.
 
Re: Rebarreling... what to do, what to do....

I ran a few numbers on a ballistic program and the 300 wsm retained higher energies until 1000, which is what I put as max distance. A 210 grain berger vld 308 has a bc of .616 and a 180 grain berger vld 7mm has a bc of .659. You will get very similar velocities so a slightly higher bc won't make up for the 30 grain weight difference.
 
Re: Rebarreling... what to do, what to do....

They are both very close and it would be a flip of a coin ic most cases. I do a lot of BR shooting so my reason for 7mm with energy being so close would be for accuracy. I know what ballistic charts say but nothing is better than finding out for yourself. We have a couple 7mm that completely tear it up on the 600 and 1000yd line. Wind or no wind. 300 WSM hasn't compared at 1000. I know it could be differences of shooters/ scopes/ guns/ wind etc...But experienced guys are shooting both and this is just my observation. A 500+ yard shot would require pretty damn good accuracy and as I am not a hunter and don't claim to be, I would think if the two compare so close with energy, I would definetly take the one with more potential for accuracy. Just my .02 on this but I could be wrong
 
Re: Rebarreling... what to do, what to do....

Now 284 Win, that's a thought. That would give me good barrel life as well. Anyone have hunting or long range experience with this one? I figure that I would not have to worry about the mag bolt face and the magazine problem either...

Found this
http://www.6mmbr.com/gunweek095.html

The only problem, was he was unable to get the heavy Amax's to work in the magazine length of a SA. Any problems as such in the 7mm WSM?