7mm mag or 7mm wsm
#2
Nontypical Buck
Join Date: Feb 2003
Location: Western Nebraska
Posts: 3,393
RE: 7mm mag or 7mm wsm
For black bear and deer either of them should suit you nicely. Should you wish to venture out after the bigger stuff (moose and the bigger bears) I'd personally prefer any of the longer 7MM magnums.....REM, STW, or RUM.
#4
RE: 7mm mag or 7mm wsm
ORIGINAL: Ruger-Redhawk
The 7mm Rem Mag has worked fine for me.I see no point in switching now.Both are fine cartridges but I like my 7mmRM's. A good flat shooting round.
Ruger Redhawk
The 7mm Rem Mag has worked fine for me.I see no point in switching now.Both are fine cartridges but I like my 7mmRM's. A good flat shooting round.
Ruger Redhawk
Beware, there are so many new calibers on the market, some are bound to fail! If you reload, that may be no problem! If not, someday you may have a hard time comming by ammo!
#5
RE: 7mm mag or 7mm wsm
None of the three WSM's are going to be going anywhere. There are already way too many rifles chambered in them for them to dissappear.
Either one of them will kill anything you would hunt with them. You nor the animals will ever notice a bit of difference in the performance between the two.
Personally I would choose the WSM simply because it is a short action and there is no belt on the case but I just prefer that on my guns.
Either one of them will kill anything you would hunt with them. You nor the animals will ever notice a bit of difference in the performance between the two.
Personally I would choose the WSM simply because it is a short action and there is no belt on the case but I just prefer that on my guns.
#6
Join Date: Feb 2003
Location: Grand Bay, AL
Posts: 181
RE: 7mm mag or 7mm wsm
None of the three WSM's are going to be going anywhere. There are already way too many rifles chambered in them for them to dissappear.
#8
RE: 7mm mag or 7mm wsm
I'd agree with the consensus that the WSM cartridges aren't going anywhere. The last time I was in Scheel's I noticed that for every rifle chambered in the long version (7mm Rem Mag, .300Win Mag, and .270Win...there were no .270 Weatherby Mags), there were at least three rifles in the corresponding WSM calibers. And according to the sales guy, who had no reason to lie since he knew I wasn't there to buy one, they are selling the WSM rifles like hotcakes. The most popular are the .300WSM and .270WSM.
I personally think that the WSM's fill a useful niche in the sporting caliber range. They provide many benefits inherent to the short design (efficiency, consistancy, etc...), allow the hunter to have respectable but reasonable firepower in a smaller, lighter rifle, and meet or exceed the performance of their full sized cousins in most loadings. It's a recipe for success if you ask me. The only area I think they fall short of their big cousins is when loading the heaviest bullet weights, so I don't think that the belted mags are doomed to obsolecense yet, but the WSM's are giving them a good run for their money.
As for the SAUM's, I've never even seen a rifle chambered in one on sale in any of the local gun stores, so if I were a betting man I'd wager that it's the SAUM shooters who'll be searching for factory loads long before the WSM's shooters are.
Now if we were talking about the new WSSM's, well I think that the jury is still out on those, but I really don't think that they're as much of a contender against their cousin cartridges as the WSM's are, mostly because they provide no significant advantage over the cartridges they are designed to compete with from the information I've seen. I could be wrong though...never underestimate the power of a fad, eh?!
Mike
I personally think that the WSM's fill a useful niche in the sporting caliber range. They provide many benefits inherent to the short design (efficiency, consistancy, etc...), allow the hunter to have respectable but reasonable firepower in a smaller, lighter rifle, and meet or exceed the performance of their full sized cousins in most loadings. It's a recipe for success if you ask me. The only area I think they fall short of their big cousins is when loading the heaviest bullet weights, so I don't think that the belted mags are doomed to obsolecense yet, but the WSM's are giving them a good run for their money.
As for the SAUM's, I've never even seen a rifle chambered in one on sale in any of the local gun stores, so if I were a betting man I'd wager that it's the SAUM shooters who'll be searching for factory loads long before the WSM's shooters are.
Now if we were talking about the new WSSM's, well I think that the jury is still out on those, but I really don't think that they're as much of a contender against their cousin cartridges as the WSM's are, mostly because they provide no significant advantage over the cartridges they are designed to compete with from the information I've seen. I could be wrong though...never underestimate the power of a fad, eh?!
Mike
#9
RE: 7mm mag or 7mm wsm
WSM's.............Winchester, Browning, Ruger, Howa / Weatherby Vanguard, Sako, Tikka, Kimber, Savage, HS Precision, Montana rifleman, ??????
SAUM..............Remington, Ruger, ??????
Numerous companies load for the WSM's but I think that only Remington loads for the SAUM's. Heck even Remington loads for the .270WSM.
I wouldn't bet on the Remington SAUM's being here for very long.
SAUM..............Remington, Ruger, ??????
Numerous companies load for the WSM's but I think that only Remington loads for the SAUM's. Heck even Remington loads for the .270WSM.
I wouldn't bet on the Remington SAUM's being here for very long.