J Valentine
Ah, the .243 vs the 6mm. I don't know your age, but I am old enough to remember the lamenting and knashing of teeth from writers wondering why shooters didn't recognize the .243 calibers real role, that as a Varminter.
But Middle America wanted to hunt deer with them, and that 1-12 twist that Remington insisted on barreling the originol 6mm Rem, (240) it just would not handle the 90+ grn bullets that deer hunters liked.
Even when Remington ammended its ways, (even changed the name), nobody cared. Winchester won the battle. Every major manufacturer offers Rifles chamberd in that pug nosed little .243
But Remington got them back. When Winchester introduced the .264 Magnum, it was touted as the fastest, flatest shooting thing ever. The only problem was they did all the Factory testing in 28+ inch barrels. Well, nobody wanted to lug that around, and what shooters who actually owned Chronographs, (and of course, magazine writers), found that "the fastest and flatest" left a lot on the table when shooters opted for tubes that were more manageable in the field.
In the mean time, Big Green was watching all of this, and behind a REALLY aggresive add campain, (magazines love those big full page adds), brought out what was nothing more than a .264 necked up to 7mm. Of course, everybody went GaGa, and the 7mm Remington Mag became, and still is, one of the all time popular chamberings. The 264 was relagated to the backpage of ballistics.
Of course, if the 7mm Rem Mag was brought out now, the first thing we would all do is neck it down to .264 and call it the "fastest and flatest shooting thing ever". And all it would be is a 264 Winchester Mag.
........jackie