Originally posted by Frontier Gear
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Ruger American in 6.5 Grendel
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Originally posted by LRRPF52 View PostPaul Peloquin
Did government credibility die of Covid or with Covid?
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Originally posted by biodsl View PostFunny how people see things differently. I would have described the Creedmoor as a Grendel Long.
The 6.5 Grendel is one of the only cartridges developed recently that originated from a small shop and received SAAMI standardization, and now has Hornady, Federal Fusion, Federal American Eagle, Federal Gold Medal Match, Wolf Steel case, and CIP standardization.
There are only a handful of cartridges that have steel case and Federal Gold Medal Match options. 6.5 Creedmoor is not one of them, although I really like 6.5 Creedmoor and love watching it throw .308 to the last century as the go-to long range cartridge as we finally catch up with over 100 years of capability.
If you hold a mini action versus a short action, I think there is a huge argument in favor of the Grendel as a lightweight, handy, low recoil option for most hunters and target shooters.
The 6.5 Creedmoor definitely has an advantage in competition and hunting reach, with roughly 200yds additional performance with some weight and recoil penalties.NRA Basic, Pistol, Rifle, Shotgun, RSO
CCW, CQM, DM, Long Range Rifle Instructor
6.5 Grendel Reloading Handbooks & chamber brushes can be found here:
www.AR15buildbox.com
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I kind of chuckle at the creedmore i mean its a great round but it doesnt really do anything new, the 6.5x47 lapua was functionally the same thing as far as seating the bullets out farther in a short action and pre dates it by a few minutes, the 260 has been around for 30 years as a SAAMI cartridge, and the 6.5x55 basically dates back to the beginning of smokeless powder and other than action length none of them do anything particularly new, the grendel nitch is fitting into ar15 and micro bolt actions honestly inside 1200 yards there really hasnt been a dramatic improvement in the 6.5s over the swede other than platform obviously the lighter moving mass and improved lock time of modern actions are an improvement over the mauser but cartridge wise you would be hard pressed to improve upon swede performace in a modern action with modern components in a practical mannerPunctuation is for the weak....
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Folks,
The only thing that concerns me is the stock, if it is anything like the Ruger American I had in 7mm-08 oh boy. The forearm was like chewing gum, it flexed horribly. I do not expect McMillian quality, but a good stock that anchors the rifle well, and does not flex. Even with a bipod. A2
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It's here
Well I have one in my hot little hands. Sorry for the grainy pictures.
Overall, I'd say that it is exactly as I expected. A Ruger American that takes AR mags. Here it is above my son's Ruger American Predator in 308.
Ruger 65 2.jpg
It ships with one ten round C-Products Defense mag.
Ruger 65 mag.jpg
The stock is "better" but it is still obviously a plastic stock. It's not as flimsy as some other Ruger American stocks that I've seen, but it is pretty squishy. The biggest improvement is in the magazine. I've always hated the Ruger American rotary magazines and they have totally changed that. It almost looks like you could replace the stock and keep the mag well or vice-versa.
Ruger 65 1.jpg
Ruger 65 3.jpg
The mag well stops right after the magazine catch. This allows for a little "rocking" motion of the magazine. I didn't notice it with the ten round mag, but it was noticeable with the larger capacity mag. I'd almost rather them extend the magwell down some to support the magazine more since you can't use flush mount mags anyways. My large C-Products mag was tight in the Ruger. That particular mag is tight in some of my AR lowers as well. I tried one C-Products 10 round mag, 1 C-Products 20 round mag and two E-Lander 10 round mags. They all worked well except for the 20 round C-Products (which has some issues in certain ARs as well).
Ruger 65 4.jpg
Ruger 65 5.jpg
You can't close the bolt with an empty mag unless you drop the mag or push the follower down with your finger.Engineer, FFL and Pastor
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Right now, when I talked to Boyds ~ week ago, their stocks are only for the earlier version of the RAP, they don't work with the AR mag style of stock.
Course that may change in the future... who knows."Down the floor, out the door, Go Brandon Go!!!!!"
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It will be interesting to see what the after market parts are for these. A few more thoughts:
- The magazine catch and button look exactly like AR parts. I'd have to take it apart to verify for sure, but right now I'm about 90% sure that they are.
- Ruger kind if mis-marketed this by putting it in their "Predator" line in my opinion. At this length of gun, it may as well be a 6.5 Creedmoor. It has the same length and weight as their new Predator in 6.5 Creedmoor that takes AI mags. I know that some people would want the Grendel over the Creedmoor just for recoil reasons, but it should really be in their "Ranch" line with a 16" barrel. I'm tempted to have the barrel on this one cut down.
- With the AR mags it takes a bit more force to close the bolt and load a round. If you think about it, AR bolts are spring loaded and there is more force pushing that round out of the mag than I often realize. I took the spring out of my side charging upper once just to see how hard it was to load a round with no spring assistance. It takes a fair amount of force. The Ruger American is kind of the same way. It's not a buttery smooth transition like some bolt actions. It takes some "assertiveness". I think it has to do with the magazines though and not so much the rifle.
I still need a scope and mount for it, but I will give it a good cleaning and get it ready for the range. It is nice that it takes the same mags as my other Grendels. After I shoot it and get a better feel for it, I can decide if I want to cut it down and make it a "Ranch" gun or keep it long and maybe replace the stock on it at a later date for a coyote gun. There is a big hay barn out in the middle of a field that is great for sniping coyotes out of. Shot opportunities go out to 1,000 yards which is well past my capability.Engineer, FFL and Pastor
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- The magazine catch and button look exactly like AR parts. I'd have to take it apart to verify for sure, but right now I'm about 90% sure that they are.
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Originally posted by Frontier Gear View PostIt will be interesting to see what the after market parts are for these. A few more thoughts:
- The magazine catch and button look exactly like AR parts. I'd have to take it apart to verify for sure, but right now I'm about 90% sure that they are.
- Ruger kind if mis-marketed this by putting it in their "Predator" line in my opinion. At this length of gun, it may as well be a 6.5 Creedmoor. It has the same length and weight as their new Predator in 6.5 Creedmoor that takes AI mags. I know that some people would want the Grendel over the Creedmoor just for recoil reasons, but it should really be in their "Ranch" line with a 16" barrel. I'm tempted to have the barrel on this one cut down.
- With the AR mags it takes a bit more force to close the bolt and load a round. If you think about it, AR bolts are spring loaded and there is more force pushing that round out of the mag than I often realize. I took the spring out of my side charging upper once just to see how hard it was to load a round with no spring assistance. It takes a fair amount of force. The Ruger American is kind of the same way. It's not a buttery smooth transition like some bolt actions. It takes some "assertiveness". I think it has to do with the magazines though and not so much the rifle.
I still need a scope and mount for it, but I will give it a good cleaning and get it ready for the range. It is nice that it takes the same mags as my other Grendels. After I shoot it and get a better feel for it, I can decide if I want to cut it down and make it a "Ranch" gun or keep it long and maybe replace the stock on it at a later date for a coyote gun. There is a big hay barn out in the middle of a field that is great for sniping coyotes out of. Shot opportunities go out to 1,000 yards which is well past my capability.
What are the velocity differences from 22 to 16?
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- The magazine catch and button look exactly like AR parts. I'd have to take it apart to verify for sure, but right now I'm about 90% sure that they are.
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