Hi All,
Well I am still playing with my 6mm and slowly finding bullets and loads it likes. Brought the rifle used for a very good price. One reason for the good price is that 6mm remington is not common here!
Anyway I just brought a box of 100 grain Nosler partitions, didn't realise they were partitions till later, have been trying 95 grain bullets and found it shoots quite well with ballistic tips but the Hornady 95 Grain SST's have prooved troublesome until yesterday when despite the wind I put 9 shots into a very usable group. However due to the very high winds it was strung out horizonatlly so I will repeat the test on a more suitable day.
Now I am not overlly keen on 6mm or .243 but the rifle was the right model and the price was almost a stel so I took it and as I now have it I might as well try it out! Since than I also acquired a .243 Win chambered rifle, again it was nott eh cartridge but the rifle I wanted, however this one is not for shooting as it's on my licence for Collection only.
Now buddies in the US and Alaska really rate the 6mm Rem and both claim the 100 grain Nosler partition a very effective bullet, one is alway telling me I should come a visit him in MO and sell him my rifle, it's a P-H 1200V heavy barrel, but that would be problematic legally and just now the expense of such a trip is out of the question regretefully as the invitation to hunt this season is there.
Now although we do have idiots who will take any shot at any beast that show itself !!!!!!!!!!!!!!! stalkers here seem to be more responsable. Perhaps it's the licensing system? once you getyour FAC (Firearms Certificate) issued by the Police then to go Deer Stalking you need a variation on it which brings with it conditions and restrictions on where you can stalk and you will have to be accompanied for a while until the Police are satisfied that you are safe then you can apply and be granted an "Open Certificate" which allows stalking on any land over which you have the owners constent to hunt. there is no "Public land" on which hunting can be carried out on.
Now to Americans it will sound like a lot of red tape, and it is, however the accident rate when shooting is very low here in the UK, lower than that on the Continent where compulsory training and hunting certificates are required. So perhaps it's the people and not the system?
Oh and shotguns are not legal for Deer shooting except under very strict crop damage control situations and then I believe it's only the direct land owner who can do so, the legal implications are too dodgy to get involved in that so the rifle is nearly alway used. bearing in mind the small size of the UK compared to the US and the higher population densitiy, it makes one wonder about the need for the American Shotgun only zones?