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6mm rem
Will a 1:10 twist stabilize heavier bullets? From what I am reading the reason the 6mm rem never took off was due to being offered in a fast twist for varmint shooters, while the .243 would shoot the heavier bullets that deer hunters wanted. I dont know enough to know what " fast" or " slow" twist rates are for any caliber, but I bet someone here knows!
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Re: 6mm rem
No. If you want to shoot 100 or heavier i'd go 1/8 and if just 115 DTACS i'd go 1/7.5. I just check a box of 95 gr VLD Bergers and they recommend 1/9. My 1/8 shoots 107 SMK and 75 gr Vmax very well.
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Re: 6mm rem
You have the idea of fast and slow twist backwards. A 1:10" twist (one turn in 10") is "faster" than a 1:12" twist (one turn in 12"). A fast twist spins the bullet faster.
The original version of Remington riflres for the 6 mm Rem (called the .244 Rem at the time) had a 1:12" twist and it was too "slow" to stabilize bullets heavier than about 90 gr. Remington thought it was going to be just a varmint round and wouldn't need heavy bullets.
The .243 Winchester was seen as a dual purpose right from its introduction (varmint and deer size big game) and came with a 1:10" twist (i.e. a "faster" twist) that would stabilize 100 gr and even slightly heavier bullets. The .243Win was a tremendous success right from the start and the .244 Rem was a VERY slow seller.
Remington saw the error of its ways and changed their rifling twist to, IIRC, 1:9" and renamed the cartridge the 6 mm Rem to try to divorce it from the .244's poor reputation.
So, yes, a 1:10" twist will be fine for a 6 mm Rem unless you plan to use very heavy bullets or very long for weight target bullets like the "VLD" type. Then an even faster twist would be better.
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Re: 6mm rem
The 10 twist will stabilize "standard" hunting bullets up to 100 grains just fine (as well as the lighter varmint bullets).
It will not stabilize A-Max and VLD type 95-115 grain bullets (long distance target types).