I have been playing….With my family now mostly resident in rural Sweden I wanted to look for a suitable ’survival’ calibre for use up there. In Africa, the wildlife available means the minimum is .308. But elsewhere….so I built up a few rifles and have tried them on African plains game for the last year.
1- .223 with a 1:7 twist barrel
2- 6,8 SPC
3- 6mm BR
4- 6,5 Grendel
5- CZ min in 7.62x39
All were built on Sako or CZ mini actions and all had 20” barrels with a reflex silencer built in. I have an unlimited, free supply of 6mm BR with 105grn bullets…so it was worth the extreme hassel of getting it to fit in the short action (it is 1mm too long when the 105grn factory ammo is used)
Mostly I have shot impala and warthog but also played with them on the range.
In conclusion…..
1) The .223 with appropriate ammo is adequate for game up to 500lbs with careful shot placement and using bullets of 77grns or over. The heavier bullets also stretch the usable range to 500m provided the wind isn’t too strong. It is not a .308 and no amount of trickery will make it into a .308 but it is a lightweight and offers surprisingly good performance.
2) 6,8 SPC….is great for what it was designed for- close range effectiveness in a .223 sized platform. No amount of playing with the bullets will make it into anything more than a 300m round, but at ‘normal’ hunting ranges it is more effective than the .223- a better ‘stopping round and a better hunting one. The problem for me is that ammo was almost non existent in Africa and I have never seen any in Europe. Nice concept…beats the 7,62x39 round at everything.
3) 6mm BR Norma- The best ‘hunting’ round of the lot and also the best long range cartridge. The down side is that ammo is relatively bulky. Yes the rounds are shorter than a .308 but they are the same diameter…The sako mag that holds 5 .223 can just hold 3 BR rounds with a lot of machine time!
4) 6,5 Grendel…Not in the same league as the 6BR. Better for long range work than the .223 but not significantly so. More effective on impala but not up to the 6,8 or 6BR..Interesting, but Glad I found somebody who really really wanted the rifle….
5) 7,62x39- along with the .303 the most commonly available cartridge in Africa. Given decent hunting bullets it is a fine medium game round. It is a 200m round and has the shortest ‘reach’ of any of the cartridges tried. The freely available com block ammo though is all corrosively primes and uses .310” bullets (instead of the .308 I used and had a barrel for). Didn’t make much difference. The gook ammo still shot to it’s normal poor standard out of the smaller bore and pressures are low enough that, in a bolt action at any rate, you are not going to have a problem. If however, you want groups not patterns you need to use the correct sized, US made bullets!
Of them all, the 6mm BR is the most effective, both on game and in terms of reach- it isn’t exactly a common round though! It also has the ability to put pullets through cover that would defeat any of the other rounds.
The 6,5 Grendel beats the standard 7,62x39 in terms of range but not in terms of efficiency on game (when the 7,62 has good bullets). No more accurate than a good 7,62x39 and I doubt as effective on people under 200m. It also really needs a 24” barrel to deliver.
The 6,8SPC…great round but just too obscure here or in Europe. It also is the most efficient out of a short barrel (16”)
7,62x39 – can be made effective with a good barrel and good ammo. Efficient from a short barrel if you needed it. A 7,62x39 AI would have considerable merit, provided you could fire standard gook ammo if needed. An extra 100fps at the muzzle would do things for this round.
.223- but set up for heavy bullets. A surprisingly good compromise – and when all is said and done, my choice. One can also shoot mil spec ammo if you need to (although the military seems to be moving this way anyway..I have some US military MK 262 ammo which is loaded with the sierra 77grn MK bullet.)