The Year of the 6.5

ab39 ammo
June 19, 2017  
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Categories: Op-Eds

Some say this is the year of the pistol caliber carbine; others disagree and say it’s the time of the 6.5. We’ll let you guess what John here thinks. Mad Duo

Today’s article was brought to you – in its entirety, mind you – by EOTech.

The Year of the 6.5

John Darwin

The historical argument for terminal ballistic performance has always been “bigger is better.” This argument has been fought for decades in the pistol market between 9mm and .45. Translate this into long rang precision and you find team .30cal fighting a losing battle to 6.5mm and 6mm fans.

The .308 or 7.62×51 has been the long-time champion of military and popular short action calibers; both the venerable M118 and newcomer AB39 have canceled many a birthday of many a bad person. The round was developed in 1954, and you would be hard pressed to find a popular rifle company today that doesn’t offer multiple models chambered in 7.62 or .308. It works well in bolt action and semi-auto rifles and is fielded by the US military and almost every police department special weapons unit in the country.

But technology progresses and bullet designs get better…and the ol’ war horse .308 starts to show its age.

The Year of the 6.5 Creedmoor.

While the Sierra Match King 175 is one of the most stable-performing bullets ever designed, muzzle velocities in most typical .308 rifles still hover around 2500-2600fps. The case capacity of the .308 doesn’t allow much opportunity to increase it, thus .30cal bullet development has usually been based around heavier bullets requiring much higher speeds to fully utilize the increase in ballistic coefficient.

To get the required speeds, shooters must step up to long action rifles in calibers like .300 Win Mag or .300 Norma. But what if you could have the ballistic performance of a .30 cal magnum in short action with less recoil and still be able to kill just about any game animal in North America?

The Year of the 6.5 Creedmoor.

The Year of the 6.5 Creedmoor.

The Year of the 6.5 Creedmoor.

The Year of the 6.5 Creedmoor.

The Year of the 6.5 Creedmoor.

Neither 6.5 nor .260 calibers are a new phenomenon. The 6.5×55 Swede was developed in 1891, with more current popular options such as the .260 Remington (1997) and 6.5 Creedmoor or Creed (2007) developed far more recently. With modern advances in rifle powder and bullet design, these cartridges present a huge advantage over the old .308 in the same size.

By offering shooters a much flatter trajectory with less wind deflection and recoil, the 6.5 Creed and .260 have become even more popular recently in practical precision rifle shooting competitions like the Precision Rifle Series and National Rifle League. These cartridges can be shot reliably out of both bolt action and semi-automatic rifles based around the same actions and receivers as the .308. This gives shooters magnum capabilities in the same lighter-weight platforms they’re used to.

Whether for hunting, shooting competitions or MIL/LEO use, these calibers’ capabilities can’t be ignored and are a major reason USSOCOM is strongly considering .260 and 6.5 Creed as a replacement for all current .308 semi-automatic precision rifles.

The Year of the 6.5 Creedmoor.

The Year of the 6.5 Creedmoor.

Once upon a time, rifles in 6.5 Creed or .260 Rem could only be obtained if you called your favorite gunsmith and ordered a nice new custom rifle chambered in the desired caliber. You had to have the ability to reload, as factory ammunition was hard to come by, and this only allowed more serious shooters to benefit.

Over the last couple years companies such as Hornandy, Prime Ammo, Applied Ballistics and others have begun offering very accurate ammunition in these calibers, allowing people to buy off-the-shelf ammo to feed their rifles. Then this year at SHOT Show it seemed like every other company there was releasing a new rifle in either 6.5 Creed or .260. Companies like Grey Ghost Precision, Weatherby, Winchester, Tikka, Savage, Mossberg, Nemo Arms, Ruger, and many more all had new offerings in one of the 6.5 calibers.

Many are more than reasonably priced and offered shooters many options for the money.

The Year of the 6.5 Creedmoor.

The Year of the 6.5 Creedmoor.

The Year of the 6.5 Creedmoor.

While it would take quite a while to list every company capable of manufacturing a 6.5 caliber rifle, these are some examples of factory, off-the-shelf rifles available through most stocking dealers. Some were quite a surprise to me as well.

Bolt Action:

Remington

Weatherby

Winchester

Tikka

Mossberg

Ruger

Ashbury Ordnance

Q-Rifle

Bergara Rifles

Semi-Auto:

Smith and Wesson

Seekins Precision

Grey Ghost Precision

GA Precision

JP Rifles

Larue

Let’s us know if you missed one. Tag us in a picture with your six-five on social media. No dick pics, please.

– JD

This was brought to you today by EOTech, a member of JTF Awesome.

Follow EOTech on Instagram, @eotech.

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About the Author: John Darwin (a pseudonym) has been a professional member of the noble profession of arms for over a decade now, choosing this career when he found out Tubby’s Golden Lantern wasn’t hiring full-time dancers. He scribes for a number of publications and consulted with everyone from industry heavyweights and local LEOs. John is a POST/FBI certified firearms instructor, sniper combat veteran of several deployments, an experienced breacher and dive officer, freefall qualified rope master, accomplished RSO (CQC, breacher, demo, vehicle, airborne, et al), and PSD driver. For the last several years his primary focus has been the science and instruction of precision shooting in combat environments. He’s instructed numerous active shooter classes, assisted on several of the best civilian ranges in the country, and left DNA samples (read, “jerked off“) on at least 4 continents. He is a family man who enjoys working on his Bronco and farting in the bathtub with equal passion.

Joe Dawson

Joe Dawson

About the Author

Joe Dawson (formerly known as John Darwin) is a patched Minion who chose a career in the military after finding out that Tubby's Golden Lantern wasn't hiring full-time dancers. He scribes for a number of publications and consulted with everyone from industry heavyweights to local LEOs. Dawson, the HMFIC of Bruiser Industries, is a POST/FBI certified firearms instructor, sniper combat veteran of several deployments, an experienced breacher and dive officer, freefall qualified rope master, accomplished RSO (CQC, breacher, demo, vehicle, airborne, et al), and PSD driver. A retired Naval Special Warfare sailor, CPO (SOC) Dawson ran the NSW Sniper School the last 3 years of his career. He was a Platoon Lead Sniper, a Troop Lead Sniper, and a Team Lead Sniper while assigned to some West Coast formations, left DNA samples (read, "jerked off") on at least 4 continents, and also spent some time at SQT Land Warfare. Nowadays he writes, teaches, competes, and spends as much time as he possibly can with his young'uns getting his civilian on.

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