F. Vaccaro
AH fanatic
I do agree Bob, mine was chosen for a pick up hunting rifle. It's a Weatherby Vanguard Camilla. Short, light, accurate, mild to very mild recoil, & with the short creedmoor case I can seat long 140gr bullets out.Yea but they are comparing it to their former "big" cartridge... the 223 Remington.
The 6.5 Creedmoor seems to be here to stay.
What Gina and I love about it probably has as much to do with the equipment we have as the cartridge but it really does fit a niche for us. The rifle is stainless in a laminated stock, not a lightweight but not heavy either. It has a Swarovski Z5 3.5-18x44 scope with Ballistic Turret and W4 reticle mounted. The combo with cheap Hornady ammo will shoot 1/4" MOA! It's a Ruger Hawkeye M77 Predator. This example is a very high quality gun. Not fine walnut and blued steel but it spends a lot of time in the back seat of the one ton pickup bouncing around or resting muzzle down on the floorboard of a side by side ATV.
It has enough power to take down whitetail and mule deer and I wouldn't be afraid to shoot a black bear with it or even a mountain lion. All of which would be the largest wild animals we will encounter on our properties. Yet the ammo is cheap and plentiful so we can use it on coyotes, ground hogs, skunks, armadillos, porcupine, etc. It reliability hits exactly where you aim it and does so without any noticeable recoil.
Could we get all of the above out of another caliber? Perhaps, but in a $700 CRF rifle right out of the box that stands up to weather and abuse and stays accurate with low cost ammo without needing to reload?
My Niece has taken two Elk with hers with two shots, one each. She is a good shot and doesn't shoot till she has a very good shot..