.264 Winchester Magnum VS .270 Weatherby Magnum

Head to Head Comparison

.264 Winchester Magnum

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.270 Weatherby Magnum

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Gun Specifications

Specifications

.264 Winchester Magnum

.270 Weatherby Magnum

Height

2.50

2.55

Average FPS

3170

3335

Average Grain

124

135

Average Energy

2766

3333

Recoil

1.91

2.05

Ballistic Coefficient

416.38

441.07

Gun Stats

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.264 Winchester Magnum

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.270 Weatherby Magnum

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$20.39

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$46.49

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$32.62

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$24.99

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$28.45

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Gun Descriptions

The .264 Winchester Magnum was the first magnum in the United States to be based on the 6.5 calibers. It was introduced in 1958 and was meant to compete with popular Weatherby rifles and ammunition for roughly half the price. The .264 Winchester Magnum was introduced in the Model 70 Westerner rifle with a 26-inch barrel and rapidly garnered a loyal following. Unfortunately, its popularity faded almost immediately when Remington introduced the 7mm Remington Magnum. The 7mm Remington Magnum offers additional adaptability due to a wider range of bullet weights, particularly heavier rounds appropriate for larger animals. Since then, the .264 Winchester Magnum has become something of an oddball, revered among 6.5mm devotees but mostly overlooked in popular hunting circles. Its demise was sealed when hunters began to complain about significant throat erosion caused by the high chamber temperatures caused by the overbore cartridge. Winchester stopped producing rifles chambered in .264 Winchester Magnum some decades ago, although numerous guns in good condition are still in circulation, along with bespoke rifles that arise from time to time. The .264 Winchester Magnum is a powerful, fast killing, highly effective medium game cartridge and does so out to long ranges. Countless Elk have been taken with the .264 Winchester Magnum and a game of this size should be considered the common-sense upper limit when working to the strengths of this magnum. Killing performance with controlled expanding projectiles generally falls off at ranges of between 325 yards (140-grain bullets) and 400 yards (130-grain bullets). Beyond these ranges, the hunter must use either extremely careful shot placement or utilize a soft match bullet, specifically, either the 130 grain Berger VLD, the 140-grain A-max, or the 140 grain Berger VLD.

The 270 Weatherby Magnum was the first belted magnum created by Roy Weatherby in 1943, based on the.300 H&H Magnum. The cartridge was one of a series of Weatherby Magnums that shared a 2.545" (64.64mm) case length at the time of its introduction. The.270 established a tiny but devoted following, similar to that of the rest of the Weatherby line of cartridges, which has remained stable to this day, despite new developments like the.270WSM. The 270 Weatherby Magnum is a hard-hitting, powerful, flat-shooting cartridge. The.270 Weatherby has about 200 ft/s faster performance with any bullet weight due to its higher pressure and larger case that holds more power than the.270 Winchester. Despite its distinctive case design, it is not a specialist cartridge, but rather an outstanding all-around medium game cartridge with minimal recoil (for a magnum). It delivers powerful shock for quick killing at ranges of up to 325 yards. Broad wounding lasts around 450 yards, after which wound channels become more commensurate to the calibre. The 270 Weatherby Magnum is best suited for light to medium games. Using a bullet of sound construction on larger animals such as Elk, a bullet of sound construction can generate broad, quick bleeding wounds and free-flowing exit wounds on game weighing up to 320kg (700lb). The 270 Weatherby Magnum is the preferred calibre. It is adequate for larger game animals. Regardless of newer inventions, the 270 Weatherby Magnum continues to keep its own as an emphatic killer of light to medium game, and it does so without creating excruciating recoil - two features that will assure its popularity for many years to come.

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