Free: Contests & Raffles.
Quote from: DuckDr.Duke on December 07, 2010, 09:44:21 AMThere is a huge difference between a magnum round and non-magnum round (energy and velocity). Boy the marketing guys for gun and ammo manufacturers sure fooled a lot of people when they came up with the term "magnum."
There is a huge difference between a magnum round and non-magnum round (energy and velocity).
These caliber depates get a little old to me. Any gun in the right hands is going to kill animals. Pick what you can get the best deal on and shoot it until you get good with it. Shoot at different yardage to see what it does and go from there. I enjoy shooting. I have one of each caliber listed plus a lot more. They are all great guns.
That's a tough call. The 7mm is faster, the 30-06 shoots fatter bullets. Unless you plan to shoot at distances past 400 yards, the faster 7mm offers little advantage in terms of trajectory. If you plan to do a lot of long distance shooting I'd recommend a 300 Magnum anyway. For all around versatility, factory ammunition availability and selection the 30-06 comes out ahead IMO. My 9 year old shoots my 30-06...with reduced recoil 125 grain loads: factory ammo. I killed an elk earlier this year out of the same gun with a 180 Nosler Partition that left the barrel at 2880 ft/second: factory ammo. That's an amazing spread. Your odds of finding a perfect factory load for a gun are higher with a 30-06.If you handload the scale tips towards the 7mm.
I own both. I like both. I've killed with both. I've killed elk at 300+ yards with both. In the final analysis ...Sorry. I like both
Ginger or Maryann? If it were me, I'd take the 7mag, but if they were out of stock, I wouldn't hesitate to take the '06. I say 7 mag because most of my hunting in the past included the real probability to poke out past 300 yards.