New hunting rifle
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New hunting rifle
My hunting closet has rifles very capable
- christen arms ridgeline fft 300wm
-weatherby vanguard 338wm
-tikka t3 lite .270
- couple cva 50 muzzleloaders
- 3 marlin stamped 336 in 30-30
- Winchester 1894 in 30-30
I want to add another deer rifle.
I’m thinking 270 or 243.
What is everyone’s experience with the blr in 243. Was also thinking about the bar in 243 or 270. The only comp to that would be the benelli semi auto.
I love the new line of winchesters but the calibers are limited.
My father has a 308 blr and needs the trigger done and doesn’t shoot very well, but I think that may be mainly him.
- christen arms ridgeline fft 300wm
-weatherby vanguard 338wm
-tikka t3 lite .270
- couple cva 50 muzzleloaders
- 3 marlin stamped 336 in 30-30
- Winchester 1894 in 30-30
I want to add another deer rifle.
I’m thinking 270 or 243.
What is everyone’s experience with the blr in 243. Was also thinking about the bar in 243 or 270. The only comp to that would be the benelli semi auto.
I love the new line of winchesters but the calibers are limited.
My father has a 308 blr and needs the trigger done and doesn’t shoot very well, but I think that may be mainly him.
Re: New hunting rifle
My first deer was taken with a .243. It's a family rifle and now in the hands of my nephew for his kids to use. Very capable cartridge, less recoil than a .270 and you already have a .270.
Jeepnik AKA "Old Eyes"
"Go low, go slow and preferably in the dark" The old Sarge (he was maybe 24.
"Freedom is never more that a generation from extinction" Ronald Reagan
"Every man should have at least one good rifle and know how to use it" Dad
"Go low, go slow and preferably in the dark" The old Sarge (he was maybe 24.
"Freedom is never more that a generation from extinction" Ronald Reagan
"Every man should have at least one good rifle and know how to use it" Dad
Re: New hunting rifle
Yea but I’m trying to get suggestions on platforms. Auto, how is the blr
- GunnyMack
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Re: New hunting rifle
Everybody seems to overlook the 25s. I've always been a fan of .257s.
I have 3 25-20s, a custom 257 Roberts Ackley Improved.
The AI will sling 60gr bullets at 3800+ and up to 120gr bullets which will handle every deer or antelope or goat just fine.
The newest 25 bore is the 25 Creedmore and from what I've read it's a good cartridge.
I like the ol 6mm Remington too! Sorry I sold the one I built!
I have 3 25-20s, a custom 257 Roberts Ackley Improved.
The AI will sling 60gr bullets at 3800+ and up to 120gr bullets which will handle every deer or antelope or goat just fine.
The newest 25 bore is the 25 Creedmore and from what I've read it's a good cartridge.
I like the ol 6mm Remington too! Sorry I sold the one I built!
BROWN LABS MATTER !!
Re: New hunting rifle
.
Looking at the collection you have already, I don't see any 25 or 24 caliber rifles, and you already have a 270, so it would make sense to expand your horizons with a 243 Winchester of some sort. Honestly, if you like lever guns you might consider the Henry Long Ranger, or even a BLR.
I have a 6mm Remington Ruger M77 that is a tack-driver, and with several decent bullets available can hit a coyote at 500 yards (from a solid rest) or a whitetail out half that distance easily, or a head-shot on a squirrel at 100 yards for that matter. The 243 Winchester is about the same, and isn't 'obsolete' like the 6mm unfortunately is becoming.
The Henry - https://www.henryusa.com/firearm/h14-long-ranger-rifle/
and https://www.guns.com/news/review/gun-re ... in-243-win
Looking at the collection you have already, I don't see any 25 or 24 caliber rifles, and you already have a 270, so it would make sense to expand your horizons with a 243 Winchester of some sort. Honestly, if you like lever guns you might consider the Henry Long Ranger, or even a BLR.
I have a 6mm Remington Ruger M77 that is a tack-driver, and with several decent bullets available can hit a coyote at 500 yards (from a solid rest) or a whitetail out half that distance easily, or a head-shot on a squirrel at 100 yards for that matter. The 243 Winchester is about the same, and isn't 'obsolete' like the 6mm unfortunately is becoming.
The Henry - https://www.henryusa.com/firearm/h14-long-ranger-rifle/
and https://www.guns.com/news/review/gun-re ... in-243-win
It's 2025 - "Cutesy Time is OVER....!" [Dan Bongino]
Re: New hunting rifle
Diplicate
Last edited by K9kodi on Fri Jan 09, 2026 11:24 pm, edited 3 times in total.
Re: New hunting rifle
I don’t want another bolt for sure, eventually sure, next one, nah.
I would love a 25. But I’m not sure of a pump or lever or semi in that flavor.
Weatherby just came out w a 25rpm that looks awesome, but I want a lever, pump or semi auto.
I have a Christensen arms ridgeline, carbon fiber stock and barrel, muzzle break, 300wm. That’s my go to for bug big game or distances
Right now it looks like only options for 243 is bar or blr, I would go 30-06 like the benelli endurance
I would love a 25. But I’m not sure of a pump or lever or semi in that flavor.
Weatherby just came out w a 25rpm that looks awesome, but I want a lever, pump or semi auto.
I have a Christensen arms ridgeline, carbon fiber stock and barrel, muzzle break, 300wm. That’s my go to for bug big game or distances
Right now it looks like only options for 243 is bar or blr, I would go 30-06 like the benelli endurance
Re: New hunting rifle
BLR, 243, don't look back...... 
- ndcowboy
- Levergunner 2.0
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Re: New hunting rifle
BLRs are beautiful rifles.....but I've never cared for the trigger. Owned five over the years and don't have any now. A few years ago I was carrying a BLR 308 and a group of mule deer stood up in front of me. I didn't want any of the deer in the group but I dry fired on one three times and every trigger pull took me off my target picture. I hadn't realized it shooting on target but in field conditions that trigger was way too heavy.
Re: New hunting rifle
Immediately the Henry H14 Long Ranger in .243 win. came to mind......running that model through Davidson's search engine gives a quote from a local shop for $1185.22 inc. tax, shipping & transfer fee.....
Re: New hunting rifle
If I were going to buy a BLR I would make sure it’s a shooter and then send it off pronto to have the trigger done.
Kind regards,
Tycer
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Re: New hunting rifle
I've downed mulies and pronghorn antelope at distances way out to approx. 250 yards with my Remington .243 rifle. This fast cartridge performs quite well, indeed! TR

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Fire Up the Grill - Hunting is NOT Catch & Release!
- Paladin
- Advanced Levergunner
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Re: New hunting rifle
The 243 has a pretty stout muzzle blast, but is a GREAT deer rifle. The 270 reaches farther and is a bit more pleasant to shoot. My first rifle was a 25-06 bolt gun. I just gave my wife a 270 Rem 700 to hunt with last year.
It is not the critic who counts
Re: New hunting rifle
One of those just might be my next long gun (not that I need one, but my 6 mm Remington as my only 0.243” gun, and although I will use it for the rest of my lifetime, it’s probably not one of my kids or grandchildren would be able to use as much as a 243 Winchester chambered firearm, due to the huge difference in ammunition availability).
The Henry’s seem to be well-made and accurate, plus I have a strong tendency to prefer buying products made in the US. They aren’t a pretty gun by most standards, but I don’t buy guns to look at; I buy them to shoot things with.
“… but $1200 is an awful lot to pay for a gun…”
REALLY…??? I see a lot of complaining about gun and ammo prices the past few years, but most of us on this forum have been around a while, and as for myself, I started buying firearms and ammunition in the 1970s. Dollars are worth about 1/6 of what they were worth back then. I would not have felt that spending $200 on a high-quality rifle in 1975 was outrageous, in fact I bought a Ruger M77V in 6 mm Remington back then for just under $300. It was not a casual purchase, but I didn’t feel I was being ripped off. I still have that gun, and to get a new equivalent would probably be close to $1500.
So… a $1,200 rifle now sounds ‘expensive’ to those of us whose brains were learning the value of the dollar 50 years ago, when $3.00 was worth 12 gallons of gas instead of one or two gallons, but what is now a$1200 rifle would’ve been selling for $200 in 1975, so it’s not gotten more expensive, US currency is just worth less.
As an example, Rural King had very good Federal brand plated 22LR hollow point ammunition selling for I think $65 for 1100 round box.
That is six cents per round. I remember being elated to find Winchester wildcat plain lead, non-hollow point, $10 per 500 round brick when I was in high school; that was two cents per round. So although the emotional part of me sees that $65 price tag for what is slightly over two bricks of ammo, and I’m thinking that’s $30 a brick and a real rip off. But then I realize that the government has been printing money and making my money worth less, so it’s only worth about a sixth of what it used to be worth. The net result is that the 22 ammunition at Rural King is essentially half the price I was paying in high school.
Even that BHA 89 I bought a few years ago, at an ‘introductory’ price of around $2,700 (definitely the most expensive firearm I’ve ever bought), would really be a $450 firearm if adjusted for inflation. Definitely not a cheap gun to be bought on a whim (not that I would EVER do that…
It's 2025 - "Cutesy Time is OVER....!" [Dan Bongino]
Re: New hunting rifle
Good points Doc
Kind regards,
Tycer
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Re: New hunting rifle
Using proper ammo, I would be happy to take a .243 after deer. I have used a 7mm08, and must say that they work well with a mild recoil. I have used .270 a few times with good results. For 200 yards or less, and nothing larger than Elk, I would pick the 7mm08. It is actually just fine to greater distance than I prefer to shoot. It will take Elk with a 130+ weight bullet and do it just fine. The number of 7mm bullets available for reloading is another plus. A 7mm tipped triple shock is my most accurate bullet in my reloads.
D. Brian Casady
Quid Llatine Dictum Sit, Altum Viditur.
Advanced is being able to do the basics while your leg is on fire---Bill Jeans
Don't ever take a fence down until you know why it was put up---Robert Frost
Quid Llatine Dictum Sit, Altum Viditur.
Advanced is being able to do the basics while your leg is on fire---Bill Jeans
Don't ever take a fence down until you know why it was put up---Robert Frost
Re: New hunting rifle
My brother got the new BAR last summer in 7mm08. Like always, he brought it to me to mount a new Vortex scope, Zeroed, several boxes of ammo. I got to say its first Auto that stole my heart! Beautiful rifle, plenty accurate, recoil less than a 30-30! Actually I consider it now, as fine a woods stalking rifle as could be had. It just comes to shoulder naturally as a good levergun, handles so well, even if a little heavier than I'd prefer, but its balanced to me so im sure it'd be easily accurate on quick shots! I absolutely love the rifle, even if it is an Auto! I have an old Rem 742 Woodsmaster in 30-06, and no contest! I love 270Win now, but in a BAR, I'd consider only a 7mm08 1st, 308W 2nd, either would have mild recoil in that rifle! I know the 243s reputation, but I wouldn't consider it over those cartridges in that rifle, just my honest opinion, and I shot it a lot then, and some since!
I have some pics I think, but can't send em now. Might tomorrow.
The 7mm08 is a sudden death cartridge inside 250yds, has proved it over a 100 years by its 7x57 clone!
No, not the best trigger in world, but its very tolerable, I shot it well. It's not a benchrest rifle anyways, so in the woods hunting, its plenty good!
Honestly, if was younger, still working had money to spare, I'd probably buy one myself, and definitely in 7mm08! If you do, try Hornady American Whitetail 140gr in it, it shot it almost Boltaction type groups! Best i remember 1.5" +- little at 100yds.
I have some pics I think, but can't send em now. Might tomorrow.
The 7mm08 is a sudden death cartridge inside 250yds, has proved it over a 100 years by its 7x57 clone!
No, not the best trigger in world, but its very tolerable, I shot it well. It's not a benchrest rifle anyways, so in the woods hunting, its plenty good!
Honestly, if was younger, still working had money to spare, I'd probably buy one myself, and definitely in 7mm08! If you do, try Hornady American Whitetail 140gr in it, it shot it almost Boltaction type groups! Best i remember 1.5" +- little at 100yds.
"Jesus saith unto him, I am the way, the truth, and the life"
"Better drawdown Alvin!"
"If you gotta shoot, shoot don't talk"
Conservative since day one and until the last!
"Better drawdown Alvin!"
"If you gotta shoot, shoot don't talk"
Conservative since day one and until the last!