The 08 is referencing the parent case, the .308, necked down to accept at .284 diameter bullet versus the .308 caliber. Other variations of the .308 case: .243 Win, .260 win
The cartridge known as the 7mm-08 was derived from the .308 Win (7.62x51mm). The casing mouth is necked down from the original 7.62mm (.308") to 7mm (roughly .280").
With the serial number that you have provided,your Winchester model 70 rifle in .308 caliber was made in the first part of the year 1982.
Your MR SSP-91 pistol in 308 Win is worth $250-300 depending on condition if it is old style stock. New style is worth $300-350 Retail. I am looking to buy if you are selling call me Barnard 763-475-3820
Compared to the 223 Remington, the case volume of the 308 Winchester is increased by approximately 80%. The 308 Win now fires a larger bullet and maintains long-range speed, but at the expense of recoil.
No, 308 Win is like the 7.62 X 51 not the 7.62 X 39. The 308 Win will not chamber in an SKS it is too long.
There is no "one" better anything- including rifle calibers. The .300 Win Mag can fire a heavier bullet a longer distance, but is generally a heavier rifle, has more recoil, and you can carry less ammunition.
yes as long as the Remington model 700 sps is chambered for 308 Win.
22 BR, 6mmBR, 6.5BR, 7mmBR and 30 BR are all a group of cartridges made by cutting a 308 Win down to 1.5 in and necking to the desired caliber to shoot in Bench Rest competition.So it looks like a short 308 Winchester
The E model was an economy model made from 60-84
That depends on the caliber of your rifle.The following listed prices are for a rifle that shows between 60%-80% of its original finish remaining and a good bore.The .308 Win will be between 350-500 dollars.The .243 Win. rifle will be between 550-850 dollars.The .358 Win caliber will be between 1,100-1,800 dollars.and the 284 Win.caliber will be between 850-1,650 dollars.
No, a 303 is a rimmed cartridge, the 308 is rimless.