09 June 2010, 22:12
boom stickquote:
Originally posted by mauser93:
Calibre arguments: ah, jeez.
Would someone please post the names of each and every animal on planet Esarth that might know the difference between being shot with a .35 Whelen and a 30.06/200?
Thank you.
Are you saying that a 50 thou diff is small?
I can understand that argument with a say 6mm vs 257 or 257 vs 6.5 but 50 thou?
Using the same bullet construction and SD and same shot there will be more damage by the whelen.
I have identical remington 700 classics in 3006 and 35 whelen. To me the recoil especially when shooting 250s is significantly more than the 3006. It was previously mentioned about 40% greater and that is probably correct. A good soft recoil pad would make that tolerable. If this is your first gun I would lean to the 3006, as there is very little in north america that cnnot be handled by the 3006 and with a recoil pad it is very shootable.
10 June 2010, 02:00
boom stickThe can kill vs preferred tool argument will always go on.
10 June 2010, 04:31
Idaho SharpshooterYou can always download the Whelen (or better yet, a 9,3x62) to 30-06 power levels.
Rich
DRSS
10 June 2010, 11:30
BarstoolerFirst, I want to appologize to Sam184 because I fear I almost high-jacked his thread when I went "nuclear" on the 9.3 crowd.
(Note: I am appologizing to Sam not to the 9.3 bubbas)
Second, Sam, don't worry about the recoil. The 35 Whelen is not really a 'bench rest' type caliber anyway -- no matter what type of rifle you would own. I can easily shoot 20-40 rounds of 35 Whelen with 250 grs from a bench and not be bothered by the recoil. I know it is "perception" but to me it is not that much worse than a 30-06 with 200gr loads. Muzzel blast bothers me more than recoil and the muzzel blast between the 30-06 and 35 Whelen are very close IMHO.
Third, if you really want to shoot a 35 Whelen "a lot" it does not need to be from a bench. I always shoot mine from various positions at the range -- just to shoot it -- off hand, kneeling, prone etc. There is far less perceived recoil when shooting from typical "field positions."
Lastly, others are correct. You can load and use various 357/358 pistol "plinking" bullets, or if you are into bullet casting you can get 205gr or 250gr bullet moulds and use reduced charges (~ 1,800 to 2,000 fps) loads in your Whelen. I do that all the time. As well I have ordered a 285gr mould from Mountain Molds in Idaho which I can shoot at about 2,000 to 2,200 fps for plinkin or actual huntin.
Barstooler
Thanks Barstooler. The info is appreciated.
Terry
16 June 2010, 18:25
BoxheadAh it's really quite simple. The 9.3x62 goes to Africa for plains game, the 35 Whelen to Canada for elk, moose and grizzly and the 338-06 to Colorado for elk. At least that is my "logic"...