.270 Winchester Short Magnum Explained

270 Winchester Short Magnum
Origin:USA
Type:Rifle
Designer:Winchester
Design Date:2002
Production Date:2002–present
Parent:.300 WSM
Case Type:Rimless, bottleneck
Bullet:.277
Land:.270
Neck:.3140
Shoulder:.5381
Base:.5550
Rim Dia:.535
Rim Thick:.054
Case Length:2.100
Length:2.860
Rifling:1-10"
Primer:Large rifle magnum
Max Pressure:65000
Pressure Method:SAAMI
Max Pressure2:63817
Pressure Method2:C.I.P.
Bw1:90
Btype1:JHP
Vel1:3700
En1:2737
Bw2:130
Btype2:HP
Vel2:3295
En2:3135
Bw3:140
Btype3:SP
Vel3:3250
En3:3284
Bw4:150
Btype4:SPBT
Vel4:3136
En4:3276
Test Barrel Length:24"
Balsrc:"Shooting Times" [1] / Accurate Powder [2]

The 270 Winchester Short Magnum or 270 WSM is a short magnum cartridge created by necking down the .300 Winchester Short Magnum and fitting it with a .277 caliber bullet. The correct name for the cartridge, as listed by the Sporting Arms and Ammunition Manufacturers' Institute (SAAMI), is 270 WSM, without a decimal point.[3] It is a member of the Winchester Short Magnum family of cartridges.

Overview

When it was introduced, the 300 WSM sported a new case that showed a lot of promise for uses in other calibers. In 2002 Winchester introduced new cartridges in its Winchester Short Magnum family, including the 7 mm WSM and 270 WSM. This new .270 cartridge was the third commercial .270 ever produced, and the first one in 60 years.[1]

The 270 WSM is an improvement over the older 270 Winchester providing higher velocity with bullets of the same weight, and thus a flatter trajectory and more energy. Velocities tend to be about 250ft/s faster, in a cartridge that is shorter and can therefore be used ina shorter action resulting in a more compact rifle if desired.

Performance

The .270 WSM is the only cartridge of the WSM family that produces notable ballistic gains over other existing cartridges. It is the best performing short action on the market. The .300 WSM closely mimics the long-popular .300 Winchester Magnum, while the 7mm WSM matches performance of the 7mm Remington Magnum in similar barrel lengths. The .325 WSM is in a league of its own in North America as the 8 mm caliber has not become commonplace.[4]

The .270 WSM comes quite close in performance to the legendary .270 Weatherby Magnum, with notable differences being that the .270 WSM is chambered in a short action and normally utilizes a 24" barrel whereas the older Weatherby cartridge utilizes a long action and is most commonly paired with a 26" barrel. The .270 Weatherby has a belt and the .270 WSM does not.

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Pearce . Lane . Nosler's Model 48 Sporter and the .270 WSM . Shooting Times . 48. 10 . 44–46 . October 2007 .
  2. "270 WSM reloading data " from Accurate Powder
  3. http://www.saami.org/ Sporting Arms and Ammunition Manufacturers' Institute
  4. Web site: Short Magnums.