Free: Contests & Raffles.
No I'm making a point based on the limits of this platform. First hand experience can not trump the physical limits of bullets or the AR-15. You can't break that AR-15 wall which is why there are trade-offs with all these bullets. Hunting at 5 or 600 yards is a can of worms in itself because of wind drift. But I would not use an AR-15 in that scenario because there are better tools for the job. Well that goes back to my first point which is that I wouldn't use a wildcat for typical hunting ranges since like I said the deer wouldn't notice the difference. Actually has nothing to do with 270 or 6.8 specifically. Wildcats come with their own trade-offs for better or worse.
HATE this round. Daughter had awful luck with this while deer hunting. She center punched a whitetail doe and we had no blood. Watched the footage about 1000 times and it was a solid hit. We never found the deer. Few days later she shot another doe and same luck with blood trail. Luckily we found that deer by grid searching. I bought her a 6.5 Creedmore the next day and have never looked back. I would rather use a friggin sling shot than a 6.8SPC!
The AR platform is certainly limited, but it's hardly crippled. This is coming from somebody who really doesn't like the AR!
Bullets are what do the real work when hunting. It doesn't matter which firearm it comes from or what the headstamp is on the case it was fired from.
Quote from: CoryTDF on April 17, 2019, 02:32:43 PMHATE this round. Daughter had awful luck with this while deer hunting. She center punched a whitetail doe and we had no blood. Watched the footage about 1000 times and it was a solid hit. We never found the deer. Few days later she shot another doe and same luck with blood trail. Luckily we found that deer by grid searching. I bought her a 6.5 Creedmore the next day and have never looked back. I would rather use a friggin sling shot than a 6.8SPC!While I'm not as fond of the 6.8 as some other AR rounds, still, bullets matter a lot more than headstamps. What you describe above is a bullet choice problem (or dare I say it, maybe a shot placement problem, I wasn't there); the 6.8 cartridge is fully capable of making clean kills on deer. I fully agree with Yorke on this stuff. I've never used the 270 AR, but have/do use a number of other AR wildcats and pretty much all of them are capable of more than some here seem to think.I'd sure like to hear more about this "AR15 wall" and the limits of the platform from konradcountry. I think it'll be really helpful for those of us with personal experience in the matter to learn why someone's theories trump what we've actually seen in the field.
I'd sure like to hear more about this "AR15 wall" and the limits of the platform from konradcountry. I think it'll be really helpful for those of us with personal experience in the matter to learn why someone's theories trump what we've actually seen in the field.
Quote from: Yondering on April 17, 2019, 04:25:25 PMI'd sure like to hear more about this "AR15 wall" and the limits of the platform from konradcountry. I think it'll be really helpful for those of us with personal experience in the matter to learn why someone's theories trump what we've actually seen in the field.Yea I must be making stuff up. No wall with the AR15. Go ahead and build an AR15 in 270 Win if you think this is all theortical mumbo jumbo. Why bother with 270 light? Tell us how that goes.
Quote from: yorketransport on April 17, 2019, 03:30:54 PMThe AR platform is certainly limited, but it's hardly crippled. This is coming from somebody who really doesn't like the AR! I have never called the AR crippled. This is coming from someone that likes the AR. My point was that you can't wildcat around its limitations. That's partly why there are so many ammo choices. Everyone is trying give and take towards specific needs. If I wanted a 600 yard hunting rifle I wouldn't look towards the AR15. It isn't a sleight on the AR15 or even an endorsement of 600 yard hunting. Quote from: yorketransport on April 17, 2019, 03:30:54 PMBullets are what do the real work when hunting. It doesn't matter which firearm it comes from or what the headstamp is on the case it was fired from. I said wildcats come with a trade-off. I didn't say what it is. I think you took that as some sort of criticism of wildcat performance or hunting use. That trade-off of wildcats is resale value and dependence on limited manufacturers, and that is if you are comfortable reloading. Has nothing to do with use or performance. Anyways I just read that the guys who came up with the 270 AR no longer make the barrel. This scenario is really my concern with these niche rounds. People lose interest and then you can't sell it. Now if you don't care about resale or replacing the barrel then fine but for typical hunters that is a major trade-off.
Quote from: konradcountry on April 18, 2019, 03:40:03 PMQuote from: Yondering on April 17, 2019, 04:25:25 PMI'd sure like to hear more about this "AR15 wall" and the limits of the platform from konradcountry. I think it'll be really helpful for those of us with personal experience in the matter to learn why someone's theories trump what we've actually seen in the field.Yea I must be making stuff up. No wall with the AR15. Go ahead and build an AR15 in 270 Win if you think this is all theortical mumbo jumbo. Why bother with 270 light? Tell us how that goes. A 270 win would need a AR10 platform. And York has had a 270AR built and gave references to his real life experience with the round with real world factual data.
You absolutely can wildcat your way around the original design limitations of an action, that's exactly what we do when wilcating! The AR platform was designed around the 5.56, which is a pretty anemic round. Now there are dozens of ballistically superior options that can be stuffed into the same sized platform. There are just some people who will find a way to fit 8 gallons of stuff in a 5 gallon bucket just to say they can. Some folks just get it, others don't.
The secondary market for wildcat AR barrels is actually really good. I've never had a problem selling a used barrel at a fair price. It doesn't matter if the original manufacturer is still in business as long as it's not based on a proprietary case. Any wildcat that can be formed from a readily available parent case will live on as long as the parent brass is available and somebody can make a set of dies. The 270 AR is based on the 6.5 Creedmoor case and that sucker isn't going anywhere, no matter how much some of us wish it would.
It's a standard risk of the wildcat and has nothing to do with the 270 AR specifically. Maybe the resale value is good today but all it takes is a better or more popular cartridge to devalue what you own. The AR market is pretty saturated right now and uppers in the common hunting calibers (6.8/6.5 gren/300 black) can be found on sale. Like I said it's just a trade off. It doesn't mean it is bad or good or should be taken as a sleight. For some the trade-off is worth it, for others it isn't. For most hunters I would say that the common calibers are the way to go.