my problem

Tahoe, I am with you on the old cartridges, especially the thirties. This is my Ruger No. 1S in .300 H&H, one of the ones that Cabela's sold to commemorate their anniversary a couple of years ago. A great gun in a great old cartridge. With a great amount of recoil at the bench. I am looking for some good, lower-intensity target loads to see how well this No. 1 will shoot.

 
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McShooty

that No#1 is a Beauty, I think my next gun will be a 9.3x62 Mauser, a No#1 in that caliber would be Sweet!!:D
 
I'm of the opinion that everyone needs a 30-30 and a 30-06. Although I have a hankerin' for something in .375, I have been enjoying a CVA 7mm08 which is extremely modern. However, I'll never be without my 30-30 and my '06. Also, I love 7.65 Arg in my short and light weight '91 mauser. Iron sights, straight bolt handle, pre-bubba'd stock. I shoot bulk 123 gr AK bullets to keep it cheap. Perfect.

Classic pistol carts? My faves are .38 spl, 9mm(1901), and 45lc.

Jesus weeps because I don't have a 45lc revolver right now.
I will atone for this sin.
 
I love my oldies, .22 short (1850's), .303 British (1880's), 45-70 govt (1860's), 7.62×54R (1890's), 6.5x55 (1890's), 8mm Mauser (1900's), but my favorite is the 5.56x45 (1960's) out of my savage.
 
Besides .303 British, .300 Savage, and 8mm Lebel, one of my absloute favorite cartridges is the 9x56 Mannlicher-Schoenauer fired at dusk from a Model 1905 17.5" barreled carbine.
 
I like the .30-40 US service cartridge. Using cast bullet loads, it is a very soft shooting round. I really, really like shooting it in a Krag. :)

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Even the "new" cartridges now have some age on them. Most of the really new stuff consists of wildcats that will be a big deal in the gunzines in June and totally forgotten in July.

Jim
 
First of all your only problem is you think you have a problem.
Not exactly posting to a group like this that thinks there is any need to be apologetic about that

Me, I am enamored with the 30-06 and more so as time goes by. Newer powders you can load it up to 300 mag levels (of course the 300 mag move up a bit too but not as much). No issue with those that like the 300, but its less relevant now than ever.

Any new rifle that comes out is lead by 30-06 and 270s!

41 Magnum was my big pistol love and continue to this day (follow closely by 44 special).

38, I don't think you can beat it for a lot of applications.

And just because I don't run with the other dogs listed, does not mean they are not appreciated, just have not gripped me. All worked well in their day and many continue to be just as good or better than the boutique stuff that keeps popping up.
 
RC20 - If you would like a document on making a .41 Special load to shoot from your Magnums, let me know. Rocky Rabb did a lot of research on this and at his advice, I downloaded the data and put it into a MS Word document. He has since retired and pulled his website down.
 
If you were enamored of the old rimfire cartridges you might have a problem. Brass is rather hard to find, as are reloading dies, primers....
 
I have used most of those cartridges to hunt deer. I have taken out a 30.06 a couple of times and never connected. I just gave up on that round years back. It just seems bad luck for me. My favoritism towards a round has a lot to do with deer hunting and not the range. I seem to gravitate towards light, short rifles with "Medium" cartridges. Right now I seem to mostly grab the 99 in 30-30, my 7x57 on an Arisaka action, and my 6.5x55 on an Arisaka action. I guess I am stuck in the past too.
 
Out of every rifle I own, if I could only pick one to keep and had to give up every other....I would keep my old 30-30win 336. It's hands down (if indiana cartridge regs were out the window ;)) the most universal rifle I have. It's rugged, reliable, accurate and more than powerful enough for anything I'd run across here. And (to me at least) it's a 1 out of 100, beautiful specimen of a mid 80s Marlin.
 
just to clarify

The good old ought-six started development in 1903 and finalized in 1906, the Mauser cartridges I mentioned, 7x57 (1892), 7.65x53 (1889), 8x57 (1888/revised in 1905), the 30-30 (1895), the 300 Savage is the youngster (1920). I might be a little off on the dates but these rounds are as good today as they ever were. Don't get me wrong, I got nothing against the new stuff, modern rounds sell guns! and keep our industry going, it can always use a shot in the arm (no pun intended), I just appreciate what those pioneers did for us way back at the turn of that last century. Lovin life, and keeping those old girls shootin! :D
 
"I think its interesting that 30-06 is listed up there with say, 7x57 Mauser"

.30-06 really isn't a spring chicken. The last two digits signify the year of its adoption for military service - 1906.

It was derived from an earlier round, the .30-03, which itself was derived from the almost unknown and quite rare .30-01.

It's hard to say exactly where the .30-06 falls in the chronological list of smokeless powder rifle cartridges developed in the United States, but if it's higher than 10th, I doubt that it's much higher.
 
tahoe, just one remark, the 8x57 was not a Mauser product (despite the common US name). It was part of the commission rifle project as 8x57 I.
I personally am very fond of Brenneke cartridges, the Weatherby of it's time.
 
what of the 7.5x55 swiss (original loading 1889)?

same problem as the rest of yous guys. 7.62x25, 7.62x54R(1891) 300Savage(mine is model99-1953 vintage), 7.5x55(1889 for the origen Schmidt-Rubin design) {K-31}, 6.5x55 (M-96), 7.5x57(modelo1912 {yup I gots one in the original chambering} & M-95), 7.7X58 Arisaka, 6.5x52 (Mannlicher-Carcano), and of course Old Smelley (303 brit #4 mk1) not to mention 7.92x57js. BTW the -06 redesign from the -03 was forced after Germany introduced the 7.92x57js (154 gr .323 bullet at a posted 2800fps)in 1905. please don't confuse the 7.92x57j (.318 bullet at 2200(?)fps1888 commission rifle) with the 7.92x57js (1898 mauser). putin' the "js" round in a "j" can be an exciting situation (not real pleasant tho')
 
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