Why all the 6.5 Creedmoor Hate?

Ha ha Surely not me;) Nor Gina:)

Even though I've never been a soldier, I would be pissed if I was classified as a "Barbie Ken". I'd think of myself as more of a Farmer version of G.I. Joe ;)
With a Tractor
 
Hey Velo,

Fantastic reply! I appreciate the well thought out, articulate nature of it.

I agree, I don't typically fall for fads, especially in the firearms arena. I got bit by the 300 Blackout by a friends enthusiasm. Well, in the end I was disappointed, as were a lot of people.

We tested the 6.5Cm at work for quite a while, still wasn't sold, despite it's capabilities. As I mentioned, it took a "reasonable" well respected coworker to convince me to give it a go. It's now one of my go to calibers/rifles.

I also do not reolad, so at the time, when we could buy match grade ammo for around $1.00/round, it was a very simple decision.

I don't own a 6.5x55. For no other reason than I never came across one. From everything I've read and seen it's a spectacular round. Would I but one, yes.

Sure the marketing and sales hype over the 6.5CM is excessive. Did it bring new people into the shooting sport, yes. Has that turned some people off to it, yup. No different than watching TV and seeing all the car commercials -(pick a brand) and the way they are incessant.

So, could we get by with on;y a half dozen calibers? Probably. Would we be as effective? Yeah. Would it be a bit boring? Most likely. I like the round, I'll continue to use the round. In fact I had one of the custom Mausers I had made last year in that caliber.

Oh yeah, I like rounded toe cowboy boots.

Cheers,

Craig

Hello CraigV,

I must be sick as well.
But, I promise to press my bandana over my air holes, when I sneeze.

Anyway, I’ve shot two Polynesian boar and one whitetail doe with one shot each from two different brands of borrowed 6.5 Creedmoor rifles (Ruger and Remington).
All 3 critters were taken with Hornady factory loaded 140 gr spitzers.
These were the ones with lead core and a plastic thingy in the tip.
Predictably, those rifles in that caliber did EXACTLY the same thing as my CZ 550 in 6.5x55 would’ve done —> bangdead.
So I have to conclude that specifically for my needs, the new Creedmoor cartridge does absolutely nothing new or better, nothing.

Be that as it may, progress is generally speaking, not a bad thing, (particularly in the Medical profession).
However, some people seem to mistake sales gimmick for progress.
Apparently a large percentage of these “new is always better” types are easily swayed and quickly enamored with anything and everything that’s new.
No offense intended, that is simply an observation, not a cheap shot.

I suppose it’s easy for the “new is always better” folks to snap judge people who like myself, are not easily influenced and way not easily fooled.
And, I suppose it’s easy to lump us “show me” types into the elderly category.
Indeed I am old, almost fossilized actually.
However, my age has absolutely nothing to do with my resistance toward sales gimmicks.
Even when I was young, if someone could not show me an advantage to their latest product, compared to what I already had, it was always a no sale.
I’ve been like this a mighty, mighty long time.

One Example:
When I was in high school (a couple hundred years ago), CCI ammunition company marketed a version of their .22 Long Rifle “Mini-Mag” ammunition as having an “internal belt”.
Even at my then tender age, I thought, “Wow, what nitwit will fall for that reduced-powder-space sales gimmick” ?
Lo & behold, my best friend and regular hunting - fishing partner, fell for it.
Upon firing up a box of 50 rounds, he sheepishly admitted, “They gypped me, because these expensive Faulkers only shoot like regular .22 shells do” or, words to that affect.
My response was something like, “well, duh”.

Don’t worry folks, I’m running out of steam here so, my rant will end soon.

At the risk of mistaking what other “show me” people are thinking, we don’t begrudge makers and retailers for bringing out new products.
Specifically myself, I don’t even mind all their “glittering generalities” (aka: lies), in trying to sell to me their latest products.
What offends me and people like me is the fact that with No Warning At All, they suddenly stop production of the ammunition we need.
This, so that they can run their ammunition loading factories round the clock, flooding the market with their does-nothing-different new cartridge.

Too bad they can’t first, briefly flood the market, with whatever well established cartridge they decide to kill and announce their intentions to us consumers, BEFORE killing off whatever it is each time.
That way, we could at least buy the estimated amount of cartridges we will need to last us as long as we think we will be using them.

As far as shooting super tiny 5 shot, one hole groups in paper at name your distance, and / or hitting very small targets at 1,000 yards, most hunters, myself included, don’t care about that …….. not even a little bit.
However, Bryan Smith of South Africa was doing both of those things with his 6.5x55 in the global rifle shooting competition scene, (until tragically killed on his farm, by a buffalo stud bull that was corralled to be vaccinated).
So, all this talk of the Creedmoor 6.5 being more accurate than its 100+ year old ballistic twin is simply not so.

I predict that, if - name your manufacturer - made a batch of otherwise identical rifles, except that half of them were chambered in the new 6.5 cartridge and the other half of them in the century plus old original version, all would show essentially the same accuracy.

Anyway, rant over.
Cheers,
Velo Dog

PS:
What’s all this latest trend with square toed cowboy boots these days ?:ROFLMAO:
Sheesh.
o
 
I’d be surprised if the same model rifles using the same brand of brass with the same bullets in any of the 6.5mms had drastically different accuracy and terminal performance.

Short/fat cartridges have advantages in efficiency of burn but they’re not magic. The performance of the 300wsm was not dramatically different from the 300 h&h.

I see people attribute the 6.5CMs success to “progress” but we should be realistic. This isn’t a paradigm shift like the invention of smokeless powder. It’s successful marketing.

The 6.5CM is a fine cartridge and if nothing else, it’s helped reloaders get good bullets for the old cartridges. But given the same advantages of modern bullets and powder, the old cartridges don’t really give anything up.
You mentioned one thing I truly love about the Needmore - it‘s popularity has fostered a lot more 6.5mm bullets and since the light rifle I shoot is a .264; I’ve benefitted that way from the Needmore. But I don’t see myself ever having a Needmore when that inherently inaccurate .264 gives me sub-half inch groups with an LRX at 3,220 fps.
 
No not even close to correct.I don't own a$6k custom gun and rarely get outshot, as I insist we shoot only 35 caliber and up. Weeds out all the man bun types.
And the women and children....
 
No not even close to correct.I don't own a$6k custom gun and rarely get outshot, as I insist we shoot only 35 caliber and up. Weeds out all the man bun types.
@MS 9x56
There are three types of gun owners in the world
Those that have a 35, those that dream of having a 35 and others.
Bob
 
Ya but you get the 35 Whelen guys that tie up there beards and goatees, that's just a face Bunn lol.
@mauserhunter
Sorry ol son. I'm a 35 Whelen owner and am clean shaven with regulation short back and sides.
 
I'm not sure what you mean? Why factory? Unless we are culling I'm shooting my loads.
@Inline6
There ain't a lot of 6mms that shoot a190gn at 3,200fps. More realistic is 2,800fps or less so not real good out a long ways.
Bob
 
You mentioned one thing I truly love about the Needmore - it‘s popularity has fostered a lot more 6.5mm bullets and since the light rifle I shoot is a .264; I’ve benefitted that way from the Needmore. But I don’t see myself ever having a Needmore when that inherently inaccurate .264 gives me sub-half inch groups with an LRX at 3,220 fps.
@DLSJR
DANG my 25 gives sub half inch groups with velocities between 3,300 and 3,600 fps so I don't need more my 25 is just fine
Bob
 
Not really something to be proud of.
I've had a discussion with @Inline6 about long range shooting. He has more knowledge in his pinky finger regarding ballistics and long range shooting than I have in my whole body. And he practices a lot.

One could argue that in parts of Texas there really is no such thing as stalking game. You either sit over a feeder, the timer goes off and you shoot an animal that comes to feed at close range. Or you glass a wide area and shoot at distance. It can be argued the latter is more sporting. Especially for someone who really knows their stuff.

Another alternative is using thermal vision for varmints and hogs. And helicopters.

This isn't to say some property managers don't cut brush out to make a spot and stalk hunt possible. But if left to its own, this country closes itself up tight.

Drive through the small town and every one of them has a deer blind and feeder dealer on a corner;)
 
If you can't get closer than that you need a new hobby. The real challenge of the hunt is getting as close as you can. Otherwise your just shooting not hunting. Just one old hunters opinion.
Not really something to be proud of.
It is interesting reading people opinions. It seems people only look at things from their perspective not asking any other questions.

It appears to me you may not have hunted much canyon country. You may not have culled many animals. Certain times it is more efficient for a task at hand to kill far than up close. Not everything fits into one idea, nor should it. We all have bigger pictures to look at. That's why some people have bosses and other are the boss. It's their ability to see the bigger picture (among other things).

As far as the comment about getting closer. The last hog I killed, I stalked 230 yards and shot him at 8 yards. Try my best to practice every aspect of hunting that is possible.
 
The people that hate on the 6.5CM are the guys with $6K custom rigs that get out shot with $800 Tikkas......
“The people who hate the 6.5CM”:
1.
Probably don’t actually hate it.
I certainly do not hate it.
Neither do I have a “$6K custom rig” (my 6.5x55 is a CZ 550 FS with vintage Leupold 3x scope)
Outshot by someone with a cheap Tikka rifle, nope hasn’t happened to me.
But then again, I don’t remember seeing any Tikka rifle among my friends sporting goods.
All this Creedmoor-mania is just silly (read my #3 comments) but hate is not the right word.
2.
We are just grouchy because now suddenly and without warning, ammunition for our 6.5x55 caliber rifles is no longer available.
3.
The fact that the 6.5CM is nothing more than an aggressively advertised, ballistic twin of our 100+ year old 6.5 cartridge, in other words it’s simply a marketing scam that adds insult to injury.
“Injury” being the sudden and without fair warning, discontinuation of 6.5x55 ammunition.
This makes us even more grouchy.
 
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I've had a discussion with @Inline6 about long range shooting. He has more knowledge in his pinky finger regarding ballistics and long range shooting than I have in my whole body. And he practices a lot.

One could argue that in parts of Texas there really is no such thing as stalking game. You either sit over a feeder, the timer goes off and you shoot an animal that comes to feed at close range. Or you glass a wide area and shoot at distance. It can be argued the latter is more sporting. Especially for someone who really knows their stuff.

Another alternative is using thermal vision for varmints and hogs. And helicopters.

This isn't to say some property managers don't cut brush out to make a spot and stalk hunt possible. But if left to its own, this country closes itself up tight.

Drive through the small town and every one of them has a deer blind and feeder dealer on a corner;)
There is ALWAYS a way to get closer. I grew up in the Sandhills region of western Nebraska. Opportunity for shots out to a mile and beyond on mule deer and pronghorn. Can’t tell you how many animals I have seen wounded from long range by city slickers touting their latest and greatest light saber round. They just couldn’t seem to understand what happened when they missed, or worse yet wounded an animal at 600 yards. I will admit that bullets, rifles, optics, and ranging equipment have come a long way in the last 20 years, but there is nothing sporting about sniping away at big game animals at more than a quarter mile no matter where you hunt. Get closer or don’t take the shot, simple. Prairie dogs, coyote, hogs??? Bang away as far as you want, but give the game animals the respect they deserve with a one shot kill. I really wish every state would implement a $10,000 fine for anyone caught shooting at unwounded big game at over 400 yards. Our sport of hunting would be seen in a better light by the general public.
 
There is ALWAYS a way to get closer. I grew up in the Sandhills region of western Nebraska. Opportunity for shots out to a mile and beyond on mule deer and pronghorn. Can’t tell you how many animals I have seen wounded from long range by city slickers touting their latest and greatest light saber round. They just couldn’t seem to understand what happened when they missed, or worse yet wounded an animal at 600 yards. I will admit that bullets, rifles, optics, and ranging equipment have come a long way in the last 20 years, but there is nothing sporting about sniping away at big game animals at more than a quarter mile no matter where you hunt. Get closer or don’t take the shot, simple. Prairie dogs, coyote, hogs??? Bang away as far as you want, but give the game animals the respect they deserve with a one shot kill. I really wish every state would implement a $10,000 fine for anyone caught shooting at unwounded big game at over 400 yards. Our sport of hunting would be seen in a better light by the general public.
Why stop at 400 yards? I have seen many animals wounded at less than 100 yards. Why would the same not apply to everyone?
 
Why stop at 400 yards? I have seen many animals wounded at less than 100 yards. Why would the same not apply to everyone?
Because the margin for error increases exponentially beyond 400. Agree that poor shots are made inside that range as well, but beyond that range slight shifts in wind become major factors. Bullet flight time/target movement becomes a major factor. Exact ranging within a few yards becomes mandatory. Bullet selection and performance becomes a major factor. Just too many variables for a shot beyond 400 to be ethical. Depending on equipment, ability, experience, and conditions that ethical range may be much closer. The problem is most people overestimate their equipment and ability, especially when they have the latest and greatest equipment and a new weapon system touted as the best thing since black powder for long range shooting. I think the 6.5 CM is a great deer/pronghorn round used in the same limitations as the other medium 6.5s. I think the PRC is even better. I have the PRC and it is great on deer and pronghorn, but it is still a 400 yard package with proper hunting bullets and it is not enough gun for elk. I don’t have a CM, but have started growing my hair out. Going to buy one just because of ammo availability and I think it is a great round within its limitations.
 
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The case is not the issue, the issue is that the Creedmore is designed for different rate of twist, longer BC bullets, lead, and phenomenal long range performance, on paper, or steel. Where this goes bad in the game field is that if it isn't a TSX, Nosler partition, etc... stubby for real range shooting. It has high BC varmint type bullets, and long range performance in mind. As if they had just magically made great shooters out of everyone, and bullets that gave perfect performance regardless of the velocity they arrive at the target, with.

The case is not the issue. If all you change is the case, and you shot the same rifle with the same bullet, at similar velocity, and your shorter hunting bullet liked the long jump to the lands. And if your shorter bullet liked the rate of twist... Sure, it works just was well as the Swede. If.

The case is not the issue... Though my personal pet concept is that I like cases that were designed with feeding in mind. And my personal pet concept it I like to standardize around long action bolt guns, though that is a concept on the way out, also.

The problem with the Creedmore is when people think it is THE SAME as what was already out there, an unnecessary duplication, when it is an all new thing. The ideas are not new, but the decision to upend what the baseline for 6.5 performance is, and a cartridge primarily intended for the majority of shooters who are not hunters, needs to be recognized.
 
Because the margin for error increases exponentially beyond 400. Agree that poor shots are made inside that range as well, but beyond that range slight shifts in wind become major factors. Bullet flight time/target movement becomes a major factor. Exact ranging within a few yards becomes mandatory. Bullet selection and performance becomes a major factor. Just too many variables for a shot beyond 400 to be ethical. Depending on equipment, ability, experience, and conditions that ethical range may be much closer. The problem is most people overestimate their equipment and ability, especially when they have the latest and greatest equipment and a new weapon system touted as the best thing since black powder for long range shooting. I think the 6.5 CM is a great deer/pronghorn round used in the same limitations as the other medium 6.5s. I think the PRC is even better. I have the PRC and it is great on deer and pronghorn, but it is still a 400 yard package with proper hunting bullets and it is not enough gun for elk. I don’t have a CM, but have started growing my hair out. Going to buy one just because of ammo availability and I think it is a great round within its limitations.
Well the good news for you! You can actually grow your hair out! I don't have that luxury, haha.

Here is the way I look at things. Most people that find out I shoot comps ask the same question. How far can you shoot (insert animal here"? My response is, what are my conditions? I have shot groups at 880 yards that were 2". That doesn't mean I can make it happen everytime. Every person is responsible for the round they sent. If it is a shit condition and the animal is 300 yards away, I have no problem passing the shot. If the conditions are perfect I have no issue taking an 800 yard shot. No one has to agree with it, I'm not asking or seeking approval. I shoot my limits, if it's not their, I'm passing on the shot.

At the end of the day it is personal responsibility. 50 yards or 500, if you don't have the experience, or knowledge you need to practice.
 

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