The .308 Winchester is considered a standard hunting cartridge in the United States. It has gained popularity in many countries as an exceptional cartridge for game in the medium- to large-sized class. Although in North America it is commonly thought that it is only recommended for whitetail deer, pronghorn and the occasional caribou or black bear, the .308 Winchester is among the calibers recommended for hunting brown and grizzly bears by the Alaska Department of Game and Fish. Moreover, the Canadian
Arctic Rangers chose the
Colt Canada C19 in .308 Winchester/7.62×51mm NATO for "polar bear defense" in 2014; demonstrating that the .308 Winchester is suitable and even preferred for taking any medium, large or dangerous game located in the Americas. Clay Harvey, an American gun writer, said the .308 Winchester is usable on moose and elk. Layne Simpson, an American who has hunted in Sweden, said he is surprised at how many hunters there used the cartridge. Craig Boddington was told by a
Norma Precision executive that the .308 Winchester was one of Norma's best-selling calibers. In Africa, the .308 Winchester is one of the most popular calibers among
Bushveld hunters and is used on anything from
duiker right up to the massive
eland (a small and large African antelope respectively). Proponents of the
hydrostatic shock theory contend that the .308 Winchester has sufficient energy to impart hydrostatic shock to living targets when rapidly expanding bullets deliver a high rate of energy transfer. While .308 Winchester has traditionally been the most popular cartridge in the past, the development of lighter recoil chamberings with sufficient downrange energy, like the
7mm-08 Remington,
.260 Remington, and
6.5 Creedmoor, is becoming more common for metallic silhouette shooting. Palma shooting is a variant of full-bore target shooting done with a bolt-action rifle chambered in 7.62×51mm NATO/.308 Winchester firing match grade 155-grain bullets and using micrometer aperture iron sights out to 1,000 yards. F-class is a variant of full-bore target rifle which permits optical telescopic sights and shooting rests at the front and rear, such as a bipod or bags. Competitions are fired at distances between 300 and 1,200 meters (or yards), and the targets are half the size of those used in traditional Palma shooting. Based on equipment, competitors can choose to compete in one of the two classes, open and standard: F-TR ("target", standard class): A restricted class which permits a scope, bipod, backpack and rear bag (no front rest), the caliber has to be either .223 Remington or .308 Winchester. In addition, the weight limit including optics is 8.25 kg (18.15 lbs.). The .308 Winchester has slightly more drop at long range than the
.30-06 Springfield, owing to its slightly lower (around ) muzzle velocity with most bullet weights. Cartridges with significantly higher muzzle velocities, such as the
.300 Winchester Magnum can have significantly less drop at long range, but much higher recoil. Image:30calCOMPAREdropMOA.png|Trajectory comparisons between .308 Winchester, .30-06 Springfield, and .300 Winchester Magnum File:.308 Winchester bullet (150 grain FMJ).JPG|Ultra-high speed photo of a 150 grain FMJ .308 Winchester bullet photographed with an
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