CapnMac
Member
I'm kind of in the same ballpark as OP, except I'd revive .276pedersen (7x51).
Which is in a weird place in history. Had the US chosen it in 1936, it would have been a "gubmint" round, and widely used. Probably to the point that the .308 probably would not have been born. Might have eclipsed the .270, too; or allowed the .280 to come out as the "magnum" of the government caliber.
Ok, we cannot roll history back, but, I think we could build an interesting military intermediate cartridge about 7x45 size.
Which is in a weird place in history. Had the US chosen it in 1936, it would have been a "gubmint" round, and widely used. Probably to the point that the .308 probably would not have been born. Might have eclipsed the .270, too; or allowed the .280 to come out as the "magnum" of the government caliber.
Ok, we cannot roll history back, but, I think we could build an interesting military intermediate cartridge about 7x45 size.