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6mm Remington
6mm Remington
Type Rifle
Place of origin USA
Production history
Designer Fred Huntington
Designed 1955
Manufacturer Remington
Variants .244 Remington
Specifications
Parent cartridge 7x57mm Mauser
Case type Rimless, bottleneck
Bullet diameter .2435 in (6.18 mm)
Neck diameter .276 in (7.0 mm)
Shoulder diameter .429 in (10.9 mm)
Base diameter .471 in (12.0 mm)
Rim diameter .461 in (11.7 mm)
Case length 2.233 in (56.7 mm)
Overall length 2.825 in (71.8 mm)
Rifling twist 1-9"
Primer type Large rifle
Ballistic performance
Bullet weight/type Velocity Energy
55 gr (4 g) BT 4,031 ft/s (1,229 m/s) 1,985 ft·lbf (2,691 J)
65 gr (4 g) VMax 3,739 ft/s (1,140 m/s) 2,018 ft·lbf (2,736 J)
80 gr (5 g) SP 3,485 ft/s (1,062 m/s) 2,158 ft·lbf (2,926 J)
95 gr (6 g) BT 3,156 ft/s (962 m/s) 2,102 ft·lbf (2,850 J)
105 gr (7 g) RNSP 2,969 ft/s (905 m/s) 2,056 ft·lbf (2,788 J)
Test barrel length: 24"
Source(s): Accurate Powder[1]

The 6mm Remington was introduced by Remington Arms Company in 1955 as the .244 Remington. It is based on necking down the .257 Roberts. Originally intended as a Varmint and predator cartridge, the .244 was never factory loaded with bullets over 90 grains. Rifles marked .244 Remington have a 1 in 12-inch (300 mm) twist that may not stabilize the heavier 100 and 105 grain bullets. Originally Remington offered factory ammunition with 75 grain bullets for varmints and 90 grain for deer. In 1963 Remington renamed the cartridge, calling it the 6mm Remington. Rifles marked 6mm Remington have a 1 in 9-inch (230 mm) twist and can stabilize all commercially available 6 mm bullets.[1]

The 6mm Remington has a slight ballistic advantage over the much more popular .243 Winchester due to a slightly larger case capacity. The longer case neck of the 6mm Remington is considered desirable by handloaders. Noted Alabama deer hunter and marksman Creath Davis is a proponent of this caliber.

It was discovered soon after its release as .244 Remington that in the Remington Model 722 rifles the rate of twist used in the barrels would not stabilize heavier bullets weighing more than 90 grains. This led to a poor reputation for the cartridge as being "inaccurate." Remington soon increased the rate of twist in its Model 722 rifles, but the marketability damage was already done as far as the cartridge was concerned. Therefore the name was changed to 6 mm Remington. The .244 Remington and the 6 mm Remington are identical - only the name changed.

See also[]

References[]

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