What would give it an edge at the line over any other?
The 6.5X47L WILL rule the world.............
The only reason it already doesn't is because it's too young. You can't even BUY a factory rifle for it in America, nor factory ammo!
In a couple short years the case has proven it's worth many time over
Alinwa
We held the NBRSA 600 and 1,000 Yard Nationals both in Sacramento this year and only one or two shooters did well with either cartridge.From looking strictly at the match reports I am not seeing what you are saying.Right now if you want to shoot a small case the 6BR or 6Dasher are the cartridges to beat.
I wouldn't worry too much about factory rifles or factory ammo as they aren't winning many matches either.
Waterboy
Hence the popularity of the 6-6.5x47L,, it matches the Dasher(an actual 1kyd cartridge). But we've already got the dasher..a DAsher offers no advantage over the 47L case.
al
Hence the popularity of the 6-6.5x47L,, it matches the Dasher(an actual 1kyd cartridge). But we've already got the dasher..
If you push a mouse to nearly the speed of a cat, the cat still eats.
Extreme precision in grouping matters less at 1kyd.
True enough.
You only need to shoot 1/2moa consistently to win, and I haven't seen it done consistently at 1kyd. Not even from shooters who are regular winners(like the Kings).
Not sure what you're saying here. Are you talking aggs or individual matches? We see many examples of sub 1/2 moa groups getting beat in relays and shoot offs.
The devil's in the wind. So unless you're a seriously good wind shooter, you need the help of EXTERNAL ballistics to reduce wind drift error.
[B[Or machine gun shooting speed that is more easily approached with modest recoil. To use your example, Mark and Lorri"s Dashers drill and they shoot them really really fast. As a result, they frequently shoot in less condition than many other shooters. Being a good wind shooter in 1K BR isn't about holding off, its about find the rhythm in the wind and hammering them downrange during a condition.[/B]
Small primers won't help alot here unless it gives your bullet 1/4moa less drift to guess than your competition.
What?
IMO, the fellow that competes so well with a mighty mouse in the wind, should consider how well he'd do with a 1/2moa cartridge delivering better ballistics. This has so far led 30cals to more wins overall, because there is typically -some wind.
This is just flat wrong. A 1/2 moa cartridge (gun) will not shoot 1/2 moa at 1K and will not win except by accident. 30 cals win more often because the are a lot more of them and the winners guns shoot much better than 1/2 moa. There are plenty of 30's that can deliver groups in the two or even ones at 100 yd.
Sure, there are anomalies. Calm days. Anyone on the line could outshoot everyone on a given day.. Yeah, Yeah..
Yes.
But still you shoot heaviest per cal bullets, regardless of cartridge. You don't use light flat base bullets that would be more accurate at any range (if not for the devil). So why resist external ballistics in cartridge selection per cal?
If you want to be competitive ask Lou Murdica if you can borrow his wife Connies 6BR.
Waterboy
Greg when I say 1/2moa, it's 1/2 moa at range(not point blank). It's not 1/2moa of accuracy either, but consistency(grouping).
I believe anyone who could do this consistently in 1Kyd competition, would do very well. That don't mean 'often', or at 100yds, or one tournament, during warm-ups, practicing, or 3-outa-4 relays. And it doesn't mean that they wouldn't be beaten by someone shooting better. Has anyone here laid down 1/2moa groups in 1Kyd competition -consistently?
1/2 moa average (approx.5") for 10 out of 10 matches (10 match agg) hasn't been done in IBS 1Kin my awareness. Light gun six match agg. (best six out of ten) has been done twice I think, Brandon McNiell in 2006 at 4.8? and the current record holder Bill Ice with a 4.6xx" so that level of performance is clearly rare. I guess by consistently you mean as an average.
Also if you normalize cartridges(as someone here actually took the time to do), you will recognize the 30cals as dominent in 1kyd competition. This simply cannot be denied as it is not a close running with the other cals.
If you normalize shooter accomplishments, I think you would see consistent 1/2moa at 1kyd as a lofty goal.
I'm happy to accept your statement on this but I want to paraphrase Ellertson here and point out that the oldest rats in the barn generally shoot 30s and experience counts for a lot in this game and that skews the stats.
I wouldn't argue the 6Dasher can hold it's own in good conditions, or the right hands. It seems to me the right balance in 24cal.
Such a balance in 26cal can be had with an improved 260.
This would provide less drift, with the same potentials (like barrel life).
But for some reason it hasn't worked out like that. Frankie Bradley and his GF Diane O are the only ones I know of that have done well with a 260. Comparatively many more folks have shined with 6BR and its variants.
If your error is 5% per mph of wind, then applying this to 20" of drift -vs- 15" has got to be a consideration. Same holds true of drop error.