I figured there'd be some "discussion" on this subject.
The road in question was behind a locked gate, and we had observed the area for several minutes and were certain there were no more hikers in the area. The angle was so great there was no fear of ricochet and the bullet was found at the bottom of the crater it created.
My only point in this whole thing was that as long as a person knows their limitations and sticks to them they can get along quite nicely without a lot of extra help. I know that 400 yards is close to my limit and without the help of a compensator scope and a range finder and I'd be irresponsible in taking a shot beyond that. I know my .280 drops close to 4 ft. at 500 yards and I'd be a bad guy to attempt a shot at a deer or elk with that rifle at over 400 assuming the trajectory is similar to the 6.5. I also know that on real flat ground range estimation can be a real guessing game. So, again, "a man's gotta know his limitations" (not my quote for you Clint Eastwood fans). I have a personal limitation in that I am deaf in my right ear and though I hear just fine with the left one I can't tell what direction sound is coming from and can only hunt by sight, which prevents me from archery hunting elk without someone along to tell me what direction the game is coming in from.
Yes, the 6.5 x 55 is a real barn burner, especially when hand loaded. There seems to be something magical about that caliber. The 6.5 x 284 is a popular wildcat, but, like the .257 Bob/.25-06 match-up I have to ask how much is enough. I hand loaded my .257 and pushed a 115 gr NP at over 3000 fps and it made for a lot of blood-shot meat, left 2-inch exit holes, and it seems the 6.5 x 55 does the same thing. For long range the 6.5 x 284 has to be deadly, but up close pretty messy.
The road in question was behind a locked gate, and we had observed the area for several minutes and were certain there were no more hikers in the area. The angle was so great there was no fear of ricochet and the bullet was found at the bottom of the crater it created.
My only point in this whole thing was that as long as a person knows their limitations and sticks to them they can get along quite nicely without a lot of extra help. I know that 400 yards is close to my limit and without the help of a compensator scope and a range finder and I'd be irresponsible in taking a shot beyond that. I know my .280 drops close to 4 ft. at 500 yards and I'd be a bad guy to attempt a shot at a deer or elk with that rifle at over 400 assuming the trajectory is similar to the 6.5. I also know that on real flat ground range estimation can be a real guessing game. So, again, "a man's gotta know his limitations" (not my quote for you Clint Eastwood fans). I have a personal limitation in that I am deaf in my right ear and though I hear just fine with the left one I can't tell what direction sound is coming from and can only hunt by sight, which prevents me from archery hunting elk without someone along to tell me what direction the game is coming in from.
Yes, the 6.5 x 55 is a real barn burner, especially when hand loaded. There seems to be something magical about that caliber. The 6.5 x 284 is a popular wildcat, but, like the .257 Bob/.25-06 match-up I have to ask how much is enough. I hand loaded my .257 and pushed a 115 gr NP at over 3000 fps and it made for a lot of blood-shot meat, left 2-inch exit holes, and it seems the 6.5 x 55 does the same thing. For long range the 6.5 x 284 has to be deadly, but up close pretty messy.