Do fast twist 243's make the 6mm Creedmoor pointless?

In the UK a fast twist 243 makes far more sense for me than a 6 Creed as much as I like the Creed. It’s probably the most common hunting calibre here so ammo and brass is available everywhere. 6 Creed is not even close.

And with some places requiring copper bullets and some requiring factory ammo and some requiring both , being able to buy off the shelf is a win.
 
being able to buy off the shelf is a win.
This is the one I look at a lot.

DeLeon shows 21 SKU’s of 6 Creed in stock and the cheapest is $25/20 (on sale).

They show 77 SKU’s of 243 Win in stock and the cheapest is $15/20.

I know that the cheapest 6 Creed (Hornady Black) is probably going to be more accurate than the cheapest 243 (S&B), but for practice rounds, that’s a significant difference.

And this is not a knock against the 6 Creed, just an observation.
 
That article is from a long time ago, when there was likely only a couple different mags available.

It’s 2025. There’s a mag for everything from multiple companies. Feeding issues are only the fault of the person putting stuff together and not testing. I’m 1500 rounds into a dasher this year with zero failures to feed; one of the historically fussiest cartridges.


Creedmoor isn’t going anywhere and due to saami 243 will largely remain what is has been for a long time. Given the choice I would not buy a 243 even though I reload and could theoretically make the 8 twist work to my favor.

As hunting cartridges the Creedmoors are having their 15 minutes of fame, and that’s fine since people should shoot what they want.

Just looking at the number of creedmoor shooters that are loading pressures on the bleeding edge, goes to show there is a lot of demand for more velocity. Since shooting a 6mm-06 I get a lot of questions about velocity from guys who are thinking 6 creed, and they love how easy the ‘06 is to shoot. I usually suggest it’s just a harder way to get 25-06 performance. Hornady or someone else will probably do to the ‘06 cases what Hornady did to the Creedmoors and proclaim them to be the best hunting cartridges of the 2030’s.

To 500 yards fast twist barrels and heavy for caliber bullets don’t buy much, but trends are what they are, nothing wrong with that.
 
There's also 6mm GT.
Gardner is in the business to make money. With everyone buying a different 6mm every 6 months I don’t blame him for jumping in to make a buck. The earlier article shows what he thinks is required, now he wants you to buy his cartridge. The vast number of mediocre 6mms is hilarious, as if tiny differences amount to much of anything other than in competition use where a microscopic improvement will help win matches.
 
As hunting cartridges the Creedmoors are having their 15 minutes of fame, and that’s fine since people should shoot what they want.

Just looking at the number of creedmoor shooters that are loading pressures on the bleeding edge, goes to show there is a lot of demand for more velocity. Since shooting a 6mm-06 I get a lot of questions about velocity from guys who are thinking 6 creed, and they love how easy the ‘06 is to shoot. I usually suggest it’s just a harder way to get 25-06 performance. Hornady or someone else will probably do to the ‘06 cases what Hornady did to the Creedmoors and proclaim them to be the best hunting cartridges of the 2030’s.

To 500 yards fast twist barrels and heavy for caliber bullets don’t buy much, but trends are what they are, nothing wrong with that.
I think if people stopped judging them based on the name on the head stamp and marketing, and instead looked at them as they were designed, both around the brass, bullets and chamber, there would be less animosity.

They do a lot of things well, I’d even argue better for most hunters.
 
Revisiting this topic -
I have my 20” 243 1:8 shooting 95 grain TMKs at 3080. The gun groups well and killed 4 animals in the last week.

I had UM load up 200 of the TMKs and honestly see no reason to stop using them. I have another 1300 TMKs on hand and will likely pick up more as they come in stock.

A few months ago I snagged a PBB 6 creed barrel (18” 1:7 twist). While I could work a load for the 6 creed and it gives me the option to shoot heavier bullets and factory ammo, I feel like I’d be getting rid of a perfectly functional system just to lose two inches and possible not shoot the TMKs as well.

I’m thinking of just keeping the 243 barrel until I shoot it out and just parting with the 6 creed barrel. Would be interested if anyone has anything that would convince me to put the 6 creed on.
 
Revisiting this topic -
I have my 20” 243 1:8 shooting 95 grain TMKs at 3080. The gun groups well and killed 4 animals in the last week.

I had UM load up 200 of the TMKs and honestly see no reason to stop using them. I have another 1300 TMKs on hand and will likely pick up more as they come in stock.

A few months ago I snagged a PBB 6 creed barrel (18” 1:7 twist). While I could work a load for the 6 creed and it gives me the option to shoot heavier bullets and factory ammo, I feel like I’d be getting rid of a perfectly functional system just to lose two inches and possible not shoot the TMKs as well.

I’m thinking of just keeping the 243 barrel until I shoot it out and just parting with the 6 creed barrel. Would be interested if anyone has anything that would convince me to put the 6 creed on.
I went through this same debate with my .243 and inquired about people's thoughts on here. I was basically told by everyone since I handload the difference is so minimal to just keep the 243...... that combined with the massive number of DMs I got telling me they would buy the 243 barrel if I decided to pull it all convinced me to just keep and shoot my 243 atleast until its shot out
 
Back
Top