Small Bullets (.224) and BIG game

Care to elaborate?
I’ve been looking into 6 arc the last few days and I like the idea of it.
I have about 300rds through mine. It is I believe the hunter model. Carbon barrel wood stock... I didn't notice when I bought, but the barrel was not free floated, which wasn't the end of the world. I was going to put it in a chassis anyway. The best its shot with any factory ammo I tried has been about 1.25 moa. My AR with the same ammo has had consistent. 6moa groups. I was also hoping it have been a little lighter when it was finished. It's about 8 pounds loaded, with the suppressor. My first round of reloads shot about as good as the factory ammo. I doing more load development the other day and across 16 loads, only 1 was over 1moa... All groups where 3 shot groups.

I think with a different action, I would have had more options for a chassis and been able to get it lighter and also had more room to play with seating depth.

Over all its about .75 inch shorter that my Remington model 7 action and about 1.5 shorter than my 700 long action..

I know there are stocks that are lighter but I wanted a folder and something that was easy to adjust the length of pull..
 
"You should not use a rifle that will kill when everything goes right....you should use a rifle that will kill when everything goes wrong." Bob Hagel
 
We eat several deer every year taken with .223 and have done for several years. Rough estimate, that's a couple dozen so far. It's one of the few cartridges we've never lost a deer with. The results on target mirror what I've seen with .243.

If you're bringing up a young hunter, I'd start them competing in 5m BB events; usually through 4-H. (5m BB will really surprise you.) From there start with a 22lr trainer, and then use the .223 analog on game. You'll have a kid more deadly than most adults.
 

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