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264 WM future
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I just booked a little weekend pig, stand hunt to try out this little 264 WM.

We will see how it plays out.

I have killed a buck w 7mm/08 140 grain Ballistic Tip at 2770 fps. Shot it through the neck.

Going to be fun.

Still waiting for my Talley mounts and rings.
 
Posts: 12911 | Location: Somewhere above Tennessee and below Kentucky  | Registered: 31 July 2016Reply With Quote
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I've killed a lot of hogs with a .264 -- all of them with a Nosler Partition 140. The last one I took with it was a 250-pounder at 330 yards which was DRT with a single shot.

In years past it was difficult to find a powder slow enough for the .264. Now that a number of powders with burning rates appropriate to optimize the .264 are available on the market it seems odd that interest in the round has waned. I suppose the "ultravelocity" guys are more enthralled with newer rounds.
 
Posts: 13284 | Location: Henly, TX, USA | Registered: 04 April 2001Reply With Quote
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Given the current interest in the various 6.5s, the number of excellent hunting bullets of that diameter has increased. This should make the .264 WM of considerable renewed interest. It’s a great open-country hunting cartridge. Mine's a Schultz & Larsen M65DL, and it's easy to load for and will easily outperform the current darling 6.5 PRC. It’s only sins are having a belt (not that this fact in any way really constitutes a flaw) and is not a “short” cartridge, like the Creedmoor and PRC, which work with shorter actions. The short-action craze too is, in my opinion, more marketing bumf than based on any real field advantage.


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Posts: 169 | Location: Vancouver, BC Canada | Registered: 17 April 2015Reply With Quote
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quote:
Originally posted by South Pender:
Given the current interest in the various 6.5s, the number of excellent hunting bullets of that diameter has increased. This should make the .264 WM of considerable renewed interest. It’s a great open-country hunting cartridge. Mine's a Schultz & Larsen M65DL, and it's easy to load for and will easily outperform the current darling 6.5 PRC. It’s only sins are having a belt (not that this fact in any way really constitutes a flaw) and is not a “short” cartridge, like the Creedmoor and PRC, which work with shorter actions. The short-action craze too is, in my opinion, more marketing bumf than based on any real field advantage.


Completely agree with you.


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Posts: 1873 | Location: Northern Rockies, BC | Registered: 21 July 2006Reply With Quote
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I always thought it was a good round; but the 7mm Rem Mag 3 years later killed demand for it.
I remember it well when it happened; 1962.
And, finally, a fellow short action hater! You will get hate mail for that one. I do....
 
Posts: 17477 | Location: USA | Registered: 02 August 2009Reply With Quote
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quote:
Originally posted by Stonecreek:
I've killed a lot of hogs with a .264 -- all of them with a Nosler Partition 140. The last one I took with it was a 250-pounder at 330 yards which was DRT with a single shot.

In years past it was difficult to find a powder slow enough for the .264. Now that a number of powders with burning rates appropriate to optimize the .264 are available on the market it seems odd that interest in the round has waned. I suppose the "ultravelocity" guys are more enthralled with newer rounds.


I’ve had excellent results with Reloader 26. Of course, you can’t find RL26 anywhere these days.
 
Posts: 3962 | Location: California | Registered: 01 January 2009Reply With Quote
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quote:
Originally posted by dpcd:
I always thought it was a good round; but the 7mm Rem Mag 3 years later killed demand for it.
I remember it well when it happened; 1962.
And, finally, a fellow short action hater! You will get hate mail for that one. I do....


I have little time for short actions.

Still waiting on my Talley rings snd mounts while we suffer through a blizzard. A blizzard here is anything over 1cm of snow.
 
Posts: 12911 | Location: Somewhere above Tennessee and below Kentucky  | Registered: 31 July 2016Reply With Quote
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quote:
Originally posted by LHeym500:
quote:
Originally posted by dpcd:
I always thought it was a good round; but the 7mm Rem Mag 3 years later killed demand for it.
I remember it well when it happened; 1962.
And, finally, a fellow short action hater! You will get hate mail for that one. I do....


I have little time for short actions.

Still waiting on my Talley rings snd mounts while we suffer through a blizzard. A blizzard here is anything over 1cm of snow.


I have built a number of 6.5-284 Winchester!

In fact got a request yesterday for a new one on a Hall bench rest action! clap


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Posts: 69953 | Location: Dubai, UAE | Registered: 08 January 1998Reply With Quote
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Yep in a longer action everything becomes optimized. Shirt actions provide unnecessary restrictions.
 
Posts: 12911 | Location: Somewhere above Tennessee and below Kentucky  | Registered: 31 July 2016Reply With Quote
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