Yes, & yes. But why would you do that? But f you want 7mm, do a 7mm-300.
I have a savage 116 in 300 win mag, can i put a 7 mag barrel and use the original bolt and magazine
Yes, & yes. But why would you do that? But f you want 7mm, do a 7mm-300.
I have 7/08. The 300 cost to much to reload,the 7mag is cheaper and I have 30/06. Won the 300 in a raffle so did not have a choice on caliber! I have Thompson Encore in 7 mag but I think I have burnt the barrel up. Shot a lot of rounds, some hot rounds and a lot of consecutive shots without letting barrel cool. Thanks for all the comments
Hey Dave I misread ur reply. I thought i read 7/08. Tell me about 7mm/300. 7mm case with 30 cal bullit?
Brass fairy? What do you mean? 300WM is a pretty darn common round. And since OP already 300WM, maybe he's saved brass along the way....possibly already a reloader? Which I do agree... reloading is a must with that one. Although, my opinion is EVERY shooter should be! If for nothing else than the knowledge gained! I still get a kick out of some who consider themselves EXTREMELY knowledgeable in all things firearms, then come to find out they don't, nor have they ever, reloaded. Pretty funny to me....funny because a whole bunch of years ago, "I" was one of them. LOL! I started building firearms & gunsmithing BEFORE I reloaded. Well, I reloaded alongside a good friend(his house...his equipment...his knowledge), and I did have a firm grasp of the Book Knowledge aspect of reloading & ballistics. However, I didn't have a Working Knowledge until a couple years after. Now I look back & WOW, I was severely lacking. But, I digress. Just my personal take on the matter.
You can easily change to 7mm RM with just the barrel swap if you wish. Good luck if that is your choice. Hey, if you don't like it...can always swap it back.
I understand what you are saying about reloading!! I have been reloading for 40+ years and I have come a long way with knowledge and equipment.. No telling how much it would cost to start reloading this day and time.
Aww man! You are set! Obviously, with all that info... it does make sense to stick with 7RM. I MEAN, you already HAVE one & reload for it, so yeah.. nothing wrong with that!
The 7mm-300 is the sane concept as 7mm-08. 300 WinMag necked down to .284". Awesome long range 7mm. One version is the
7mm Practical. That's the one I would run if I was doing it. https://www.ballisticstudies.com/Kno...Practical.html 40+ years of reloading behind you, I don't have to tell you... YOU can't really go wrong with whatever you choose.
Keep us informed! Would be interested in your choice & outcome partner.
Oh sure... to be where someone like myself or I’m sure you are at with equipment. That said, I certainly didn't do it ALL at once. I built my reloading trim over the years...and I'm STILL building on it, LOL! I know I'm not alone. Many years ago I picked up a Lee Challenger reloading kit. My buddy gave me my first Speer Reloading Manual. Still have the Challenger Press & the Manual, LOL! I was given a Rockchucker along the way(which I very regretfully gave away!), and now have by beloved Dillon. Along with a whole mess of other goodies! It was a process for me though.
I too had the Lee starter kit, didn't know if reloading was for me, didn't want to spend a lot to find out. Loaded hundreds of accurate rounds with it. Had a friend that was very knowledgeable and mentored me. Got a Rockchucker, gave the Lee to young man and mentored him. Man that was a long time ago. I'm very blessed to have had someone to guide me when I started. So I passed it on. Good feeling. The reloading community is very open to passing information, that my friends is a wonderful thing.
I agree.
I also started with Lee stuff. First the hammer pounder and then the first of the Lee Turret presses. Got father-in-law hooked on it too. I learned from books. We were both engineers so that was the easy part :) We experimented with a lot of stuff along the way. He worked in experimental explosives. Even rigged up an early pressure test rig, but, didn't have enough processing speed to be really useful. Home made chronograph. Lots of fun.
I use a lee loadmaster for pistol stuff, once you give up on the primer is runs like a clock. Recently bought a Lee app press for pistol case prep, deprime/prime, it speeds things up considerably. I have a rock chucker supreme for rifle reloading and absolutely love it, combined with a Hornady powder dispenser my loads are perfect. I mostly load subsonic 300 blackout since that’s the only way I can afford to feed it. But I have components and dies for every caliber I own.
As far as making 7- 300 WM from 300 WM, do you have to turn the neck down to avoid thickness problems?
Ninner
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Agreed. The 7STW is awesome. It does suffer from a bit of Overbore though. Where as all evidence in research of the 7mm Practical shows it does not. That’s really what would draw me over some others. Like I said though, so many good options, & each person should take the responsibility of researching what works best for their needs/wants. Furthermore, our friend harleyman here, having a very competent reloading knowledge, CAN’T really go wrong no matter his choice. Just my thoughts. Cheers!
7mm Rem is just a barrel change and it can be a new or used factory barrel. 7mm-300, 7mmSTW or 28 Nosler are a rechamber or new custom barrel. $$$$
.223 Rem AI, .22-250 AI, .220 Swift AI .243 Win AI, .6mm Rem AI, .257 Rob AI, .25-06 AI, 6.5x300wsm .30-06 AI, .270 STW, 7mm STW, 28 nosler, .416 Taylor
Thanks for all the comments I have been fortunate to live in the country and have the place to shoot. I have always enjoyed shooting and reloading is the only affordable way to do that. It has been nice in the past to be able to get supplies whenever needed. Fortunately I had decent supply built up but it is dwindling down!!.. Normal thing, we dont appreciate what we have till we dont have it.
Also I dont know much but I am always open to questions as well as suggestions
Please Treat Others As You Wish Them To Treat You
I have one more question if youll dont mind. Looking at the barrel do I need to add recoil lug?
Please Treat Others As You Wish Them To Treat You
.223 Rem AI, .22-250 AI, .220 Swift AI .243 Win AI, .6mm Rem AI, .257 Rob AI, .25-06 AI, 6.5x300wsm .30-06 AI, .270 STW, 7mm STW, 28 nosler, .416 Taylor
Don't you already have a recoil lug on your 300wm? Just use the same one for the 7mm.
Thanks for answers
Please Treat Others As You Wish Them To Treat You
For a 7mm mag, my guess is 300.
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I would personally leave the gun as a 300 win mag.
Reason being better bullet selection, and recoil is based largely upon bullet weight, not just the powder amount.
I dont own a 300 win mag, so im not coming from a build one like mine scenario.
The difference between a 7 rem mag and a 280 ai is very little as for velocity using the same weight bullet.
So there is a valid argument as for choosing the 280 over a 7 rem mag.
The difference between a 7 rem mag and a 7 mm STW using a 160 class bullet could be 350 fps or more, depending upon load.
A 300 Wetherby case necked down to 7 mm will duplicate the 7 STW performance.
A 300 win mag necked down to 7 mm will produce less velocity than both the above due to holding less powder, but non the less makes a very good cartridge.
As for barrel life, these should be considered long range hunting guns and not target shooting guns.
Used as such they will last a lifetime and more.
I have several 7x 300 Wetherby rifles, both are old with hundreds of hot rounds thru them and both still shoot as well as i can shoot them at long range.
If i were starting over today however id be owning a 6.5 x 06 AI, a 280 AI, and a 300 Norma, and no other 7 mms.
My load for the 7x300 Wetherbys is 78 gr of 7828 using the 162 gr Hornady BTHP match bullet.
Velocity runs about 3350 fps from barrels 26” and longer.
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