The '.270 Winchester' was developed by
Winchester Repeating Arms Company in 1923 and unveiled in 1925 as a chambering for their bolt action Model 54
[2]. The cartridge is based upon the
.30-06 Springfield, and the case is slightly longer due to the necking down process.
Driving a 130 grain bullet at approximately 3060 ft/s, the cartridge demonstrated high performance at the time of its introduction and was marketed as being suitable for long range shooting on most big game. Two additional bullet weights were soon introduced: a 100 grain hollow point bullet for
Varmint shooting, and a 150 grain bullet for larger deer, elk and moose in North American hunting
2. While not an immediate success, over the succeeding decades and especially in the post WW2 period, the .270 Winchester has attained great popularity among gun owners and hunters, ranking it among the most popular and widely used cartridges worldwide. Internationally, firearms manufacturers now offer this chambering in all firearm varieties:
bolt actions,
single-shots,
lever-actions (such as Browning BLR),
Pump-actions (such as Remington 7600),
autoloaders (such as Remington 7400) and even a few
double rifles.
The .270 Winchester offers superb accuracy in good bolt action rifles, an extremely flat trajectory, and good long range punch, all at a level of recoil tolerable to most shooters. The .270 has been used at one point or another to take all North American large game, but is probably not a good choice of caliber for large dangerous game such as brown or polar bears.
Jack O'Connor (American writer), writer for and then Shooting Editor of
Outdoor Life magazine from 1939 to 1972, strongly promoted the .270 Winchester for many hunting applications in North America and Africa undoubtedly increasing its appeal to hunters and gun enthusiasts.
[3] O'Connor remains the most passionate and influential single advocate in the cartridge's long history.
Many non-American riflemen, and ballisticians in general, have been mildly surprised by the massive success of the .270 with its "oddball" .277in bullet, and feel that the
.280 Remington/7mm Express Remington, firing a "true" 7mm/.284in bullet from what is effectively a similarly necked-down .30-'06 case, could have cornered a similarly large market, had it been released in time. But the US market may have perceived the 7mm diameter bullet as essentially European in origin and pedigree, and thus "not made here", while the .270 was aggressively and most successfully marketed as a new, all-American calibre. It has never made much headway as an African
plains game calibre, with hunters preferring the parent (and even more internationally successful) .30-'06 cartridge with its wider choice of bullets, especially in the heavier weights. United Kingdom
red deer stalkers have been sharply divided over the .270. Some swear ''by'' it for its flat
trajectory and long-range punch, while others swear ''at'' it for its noise and harsh
recoil. It is undoubtedly an abrupt-shooting cartridge by comparison with the UK's long-time benchmarks, the
7x57 Mauser/.275 Rigby and
6.5 mm × 54 Mannlicher-Schönauer, or the newer
7mm-08 Remington, although it has less recoil than the .30-06. UK market interest in the .270 has, however, revived somewhat since the 1990s with the widespread police approval of sound moderators (a.k.a.
suppressors) for civilian-owned centrefire rifles, since a moderator noticeably attenuates the .270's loud report. The relatively strong recoil of this cartridge can be mitigated with the addition of a reliable recoil pad on the rifle buttstock.
The .270 has never been a military caliber. Additionally, while
Sierra Bullets does manufacture a 135-grain MatchKing bullet for target applications, it is rarely found in benchrest or other target competitions. Even so, today the .270 is the second most popular caliber in the world behind the .30-06 Springfield in terms of firearms and ammunition sold
[4].
Factory bullets are commonly available in 100, 130, 140, 150 and 165 grain sizes with 130 and 150 grain loads being by far the most popular. Handloaders have a larger range of options with the availability of bullets in a number of weights from 90 to 180 grains. Common bullet weight recommendations for shooting different game are as follows:
★ 90-110 grain bullets: animals smaller than
antelope.
★ 130 grain bullets: antelope or other animals up to the size of
mule deer.
★ 140-165 grain bullets: deer,
elk,
moose and anything larger.
While it is true that a .270 Winchester case can be formed from a
30-06 Springfield case, the case length of a 30-06 is 2.494 inches while the case length of a .270 is 2.540 inches.
[5].
See also
★
List of rifle cartridges
★
7 mm caliber
References
1. .270 Win data from Hodgdon
2. The Complete Reloading Manual for the .270 Winchester, Loadbooks USA, Inc., 2004, pp.13,19
3. Jack O’Connor, 1902-1978: History & Biography, (biographical sketch written by Eldon Buckner)
4. "Winchester's .270 & 7mm Short Magnums" in Shooting Iimes
5. .270 Cartridge dimensions
★ ''Cartridges of the World 8th Edition'', Book by Frank C. Barnes, DBI Books, 1997, ISBN 0-87349-178-5