(4 April 2015, 17:11)Devonian Wrote: So to look at it another way, the vast majority of bolt action rifles for sale (80% of them) are neither of those 2 calibres.....
Looking at it in another way, all those odd ball calibers might be the reason the other 80% are for sale!
We have had our problems with ammo supply over here in the past 6 years and if one observes closely one learns a lot. It is very much like being in a SHTF situation where ammo production has stopped and what you have is all you will ever have.
We are famous for "buying it cheap and stacking it deep" but there are a large number of people that never worry about buying ammo until they are on the way to the range. If they find out there is a shortage they are outraged, but it is useless rage. Not one thing they can do about an empty shelf.
It has also affected the sales of new guns, with /22 rimfire gun sales taking a steep nose dive and preppers rethinking their ammo stash.
What I have observed is that there are a good number of very useful calibers that are reasonably popular but overlooked as primary hunting, defense, target arms due to the overwhelming popularity of the current military calibers, 7.62/.308 and 5.56/.223, and in our case 9mm pistol caliber.
There were certain calibers that remained on the shelf and available when no one could find a single round of .308 or .223 anywhere in the U.S.
Over here it was .270 Winchester, 7x57 Mauser, .300 Winchester magnum, 7mm Remington magnum, 30-30 Winchester and in pistols, the ever faithful .38spl. and 32acp (7.62 auto). No matter how scarce the other stuff there was always a box of those calibers on the shelf.
Now in your case it might be different. Perhaps the ever faithful .303, the before mentioned 25-06, or the .243.
But that does not mean one will stumble over that ammo or the firearm that shoots it on a regular basis after SHTF. It might mean they are the least popular, and will never be encountered.
I feel the prepping reloader should be thinking about how many empty cases he will find in a given caliber, and how many empty guns he will find post event. The primary goal is to have ammo for the empty rifle the other guy abandoned.
Or to be able to cobble together reloads for that abandoned rifle.
Were I in your shoes I think I might reason a bit differently than most.
Whatever rifle I chose I would stock reloading components deep for my particular firearm. I would buy a set of dies and a bullet mold in .308 and .223 even if they were not my principal caliber and keep a small store of suitable powder.
I would study up on field reloading methods and the caliber interchangeability we have noted. (If I find just one empty case for an oddball rifle I can reload that case up to 20 times before the brass gives out! That is a lot of meat on the table!)
I would then concentrate on my shotguns as the primary survival/defense/food gathering weapon.
The guns are plentiful, the ammo is common and relatively cheap, you have no restrictions on the number of rounds you can buy/possess and it is the most efficient gun to use in 90% of the situations a prepper will encounter.
Like I have said before, I live in the woods on a small holding, I have access to thousands of acres of public hunting reserve and public ranges, I have a gun room full of firearms from .22lr to AKs, long range rifles and assorted hunting and surplus rifles, the most used of them will always be one of the 12gauge shotguns.
But that is just my opinion. I might be wrong.
However, when both of my grandfathers came out of the Great Depression, after going through financial collapse and feeding their families mostly on wild game for nearly 10 years, both men had shotguns in their hands and not a center fire rifle in sight.