Opinion: The .308 is a Dog

by
posted on June 22, 2016
** When you buy products through the links on our site, we may earn a commission that supports NRA's mission to protect, preserve and defend the Second Amendment. **
308_dog_f.jpg

Here is a sentence designed to lose friends and anger people: “The .308 Winchester is a dog.”

Ouch. That’s a bit like saying the U.S. Marines are wimps and sissies (They aren’t!). But the .308 Winchester, also known as 7.62x51mm NATO, is still a poor choice as a long-range hunting cartridge, sniping cartridge and maybe even target cartridge.

Now wait a minute! How can that be when virtually every long-range, precision and sniper-style rifle introduced is chambered for the .308 Winchester?

Tradition. Yeah, the .308 Win. survives on tradition. Because it was widely distributed by our military, chambered in the M-14 and the M-40 (modified M700 Remington) sniper rifle during the Vietnam war, it became widely known and used. But that doesn’t make it the best. It wasn’t as if our soldiers had a choice between the .308 Win. and 7mm-08 Rem., 260 Rem., 6.5 Creedmoor, 243 Win. or even the old 6.5x55 Swede. They shot what they were provided and learned to make the best of it.

You and I don’t have to.

Look, the .308 Win. is just a shortened .30-06 Springfield, a cartridge widely panned for being ho-hum mediocre, upstaged by the .300 Win. Mag., .300 Wby. Mag. ad infinitum. If the .30-06 is so mediocre, how can a shortened version that drives the same bullets 100 fps slower be better?

Here are some positive .308 Win. attributes:

1. Runs through short actions, so rifles can be compact.
2. Mild recoil, so can be shot precisely without flinching.
3. Not over-bore, so barrels last.
4. Wide selection of bullet weights, styles.
5. Inherently accurate? So it’s claimed, but I don’t buy it. Accuracy depends on barrel, bullet, trigger, crown and overall concentricity more than the shape of the brass powder reservoir. If the .308 is so accurate, why is the 1,000-yard bench rest world record held by a 6mm Dasher? Why is the winningest cartridge in bench rest history the 6mm PPX?

Here are some negative .308 Win. attributes:

1. Too little powder capacity for its bore size.

That’s it. That’s the whole problem. Because of its limited powder capacity, the .308 Win. case can’t drive high B.C. bullets fast enough to produce the most effective long range performance. Compared to smaller calibers built on short-action cases (often the .308 case necked down,) it suffers from excessive bullet drop, drift and lost energy. You can play with ballistic calculators for hours to check this out, but the following example should give you enough information to spotlight the 308’s shortcomings. In these computer generated comparisons, each cartridge/load is at maximum power, each bullet is the highest G-1 B.C. I could find listed in its weight, each rifle is zeroed at 200 yards and each fired under identical conditions with 10 mph right angle wind.

Notice that each cartridge is a version of the .308 Win. and most shoot flatter and drift less. Notice also how some lighter bullets have less kinetic energy than the .308 loads at 200 yards but carry more at 700 yards. The best overall balance of flat trajectory, retained energy and minimal wind deflection goes to the little known, under appreciated 260 Remington. It even out-muscles the 168-gr. 308 bullet after 600 yards.

Notice also how performance is similar for every cartridge/bullet combination to 300 yards. The .308 Winchester more than holds its own in drift and drop. It wins in retained energy. For general purpose hunting and short range shooting, the .308 Win. shines. But beyond 300 yards… let’s not pretend it’s some kind of long-range marvel, because it’s not.

Latest

Sierra 5 SG Lede
Sierra 5 SG Lede

#SundayGunday: Dead Air Sierra 5

This week on #SundayGunday, we’re diverging a touch from our usual fare of things that go bang, for something that can bring down the decibels a touch. This week, we’re talking about the Dead Air Sierra 5. Initially designed as a hard-use can for AR pattern rifles, the Sierra 5 has found a dedicated following among hunters who favor the platform, specifically coyote and hog hunters. Learn more about it in this exclusive video.

Recipe: Venison Italian Wedding Soup

Looking for a hot bowl of soup to finish out a hunt? Look no further than this wild game take on Italian Wedding Soup by Brad Fenson.

Winchester Xpert Waterfowl Swapping Paint this Weekend

If you’re not in a duck blind this weekend, Winchester Ammunition is giving you a hunting-themed alternative.

Arkansas Sets New Alligator Harvest Record

By the time Arkansas’ two-weekend alligator season wrapped up in the predawn light on Sept. 29 hunters had tallied 205 alligators.

Thompson/Center Arms Announces the Return of the All-New Triumph

Thompson/Center Arms, has announced the return of the all-new Triumph, a modern evolution of one of the most trusted muzzleloaders ever built

100th Iowa Pheasant Season Opens Saturday—Big Numbers Expected

Phone calls poured in after the Iowa Department of Natural Resources (DNR) posted its annual pheasant survey on the Internet. Hunters from across the Midwest wanted to know the best place to hunt.

Interests



Get the best of American Hunter delivered to your inbox.