OK guys. Remington has officially announced the ballistics of its new 6.8 Remington rounds. You can see these by going to gunsandammomagazine.com, and then selecting RifleShooter magazine. There is a lengthy article on the factory rounds, including shooting a mule deer with it.
Bottom line, the new round in factory form is: basically a .270 caliber bullet, 115 grains weight, with virtually the same foot pounds of energy as the factory loaded .243 with a 100 grain bullet, and a trajectory very similar to the .308 Winchester. Three factory loads will be available: full metal jacket, hollow point boat tail, and I think a soft point, but all in 115 grain weight.
I must confess that I am a little disappointed with these ballistics from a hunting standpoint. I was hoping that this round would give perhaps five percent more energy than the .243, plus the advantages of the heavier bullet with the better ballistic coefficient. This would have made a great dual purpose round, that solved the problem of the .243 being just a little too light for reliable shoulder bone shots etc. Will the extra weight of the new bullet and the better coefficent alone solve this problem???
When you look at the factory charts for other ammo, the ballistics of this round look an awful lot like the factory loaded .257 Roberts with the 117 grain bullet. Maybe that would be the best huntiing comparison?
Best Regards,
Big Paulie