There are three problems with that statement:
I only see two problems with your statements here, Stan.
a. The deer have been shot with bullet types very unlikely to be used by the Army, which makes that part irrelevant to military use of 6.8 SPC.
Since caliber does not solve performance problems in itself, the military is finally realizing that bullet construction is much more important to lethality and the possibility of multiple modes of function. If I'm wrong, then why is there a move already afoot to field the OTM, the SOST / TOTM? If nothing else, these developments show that the same bullet types killing deer and hogs so effectively, are already getting both recognition and being issued as we speak. Perhaps not ubiquitously, but they are on the radar and in the plans for the future. IMO, the simplest thing they could do to improve performance is specifically to cease using non-expanding bullets. All-copper, or TOTM works better for multiple purposes than does a FMJ or penetrator type bullet.
b. SSA gel tests of an M855-type 6.8 load a few years ago showed results little better than 5.56 M855, according to Art Kalwas. Plus, there is no public data on gel tests conducted with M855A1-type bullets in 6.8 SPC, or if in fact, any were ever even built and tested. (All we have in regard to the ARDEC tests of alternate calibers are third-hand reports that .277 bullets did better than .257 and .243 projectiles, but I've seen no mention of either bullet weights or the cartridges used.)
If I were shooting anything alive, I would not preferentially choose a "M855 type bullet," in any caliber. Why waste time testing something that we already know sucks? If you put that bullet, eschewing better designs, in 5.56, 6.8 or 6.5 Grendel, then they all would be worse off. IMO, the best way to castrate / ruin the performance of any caliber or cartridge design, is to use the poor M855 design for anything. I have many thousands of hours in the field and thousands of AAR's on dead things and I can tell you that the M855 "penetrator" style bullet is the worst design of any I've used. I have shot car doors, gel, and animals and my results agree with most military testing. I must say, I also liked the performance of my 6MM Remington on many of the same things. The 6mm 85 TSX was awesome, and the Hornady Spire point in 6mm was also devastating. I sure hope nobody wants to put an FMJ or M855 type bullet in the 6 X 41. Please don't.....
c. Wound profile in gelatin is only one factor in selecting an optimum cartridge for military use. There are other things to be considered, such as trajectory, wind drift, danger space, and tracer performance, to name some. Even if 6.8 is the best choice for carbines, it might not be the best option for LMGs or DMRs.
Now, with this, I do agree. 6 X 41 does equal the bullet weight of the best 6.8 bullets (~95 grains) and much better BC. Therefore, if the velocity were equal (which it seems like it will be close) then the 6 X 41 could be well-suited to both SBR's, SMG's and alternatively, DMR with long barrels. The thing that remains to be seen is if it can reach 6.8 velocities in 8, 10, 12 or 14.5" barrels. Realistically, do you think we are likely to ever see the Army go with one cartridge for all its various squad rifles? I'm asking because it seems that the presence of M14's and other 7.62 rifles indicates that has been the stop gap measure thus far, for performance gaps.
There is so little difference in the shoulder that I can't imagine it'd cause any feeding difficulties. As for barrel length, the Army will undoubtedly use whatever length deemed appropriate to the mission, whether or not it's optimum for the cartridge (as they did in going from the 20" M16 rifle to the 14.5" M4 carbine).
Yeah. If 6x41 were available as factory ammo, I'd jump on it without hesitation. Hmm. It suddenly occurred to me that maybe the reason I never bought a 6.8 or 6.5 rifle is because subconsciously I realized neither one was what I really wanted...
