What I want, is a NEF Super-light rifle (the 5lb variant), in a caliber of some significant "whop" for hunting elk (among other things) way back up in the mountains (even my 7lb Winchester 88 seems a heavy after a day of climbing in the mountains). 308 or 30-06 would far and away be my preference, but NEF doesn't make a Super-light in either of those calibers. The biggest they go is a 7-08 barrel, which is pretty much on the low end of what I might feel comfy with for shooting an elk at potentially a good long ways away - and I'd have to get into reloading if I wanted some heavy (168/175 grain) bullets (and I have no significant interest in reloading). (and yes, I know a little about sectional density, and how a lighter bullet in a smaller caliber is supposedly just as good, but heavier is still better, IMHO, especially at longer ranges when the velocity has come way down)
So, I had the (possibly insane?) idea of having the 7-08 variation of the SuperLight re-chambered for something with more power - the 7mag being the most obvious choice for it being so common as a caliber.
Which brings me to my question: is there anything that would make this a terrible or unsafe idea? I see a max pressure rating on the 7mag of 52,000 CUP, which is just very slightly more than the 7-08 (50,000 CUP), and about on par with a 35 Whelen (which is available in the usual 7lb Handi). Not to mention, I would be shooting factory loads, which I would suspect as being well below the max listed pressures. So, it would seem that the pressures involved wouldn't over-stress a Handi frame (or am I missing something? is max pressure not the only factor to consider here?).
Or is perhaps the chamber steel around the chamber cut down on the SuperLight rifles to a degree, that an extra 2,000 CUP would be exceeding the safety standards of the barrel/chamber itself? I know magnum rounds loose velocity because of shorter barrels worse than standard rounds - would I have lost so much velocity with the 20" barrel that the 7mag is going to be down near the 7-08 for velocity data anyway?
And yes, I've thought about the fact that such a rifle at 5lbs (or around 6lbs with a light scope and ammo holder on the stock) would probably have a kick like a freight train. But, other than sight-in, I'd only probably ever shoot 2-3 rounds a year with the 7mag barrel on it (under hunting conditions, in which case I don't expect to notice the recoil at all) - the rest of the time I'd shoot it with a barrel in probably 243 or maybe even 223.
Any thoughts/ideas/discussion you may have on this topic are welcome, as long as they're vaguely related to what I'm suggesting here.
Thanks in advance for your input, and apologies if I'm pretty ignorant of the issues which may be involved here - Really - I'm smart enough to learn if you can explain it to me in small words and short sentences.
