That stockis a product of the Reinhart Fajen custom shop, built to my specifications and designed to control recoil, which it did to the point that once I fired four shots into a running buffalo, while standing precariously on a ledge above him. Three of the four shots could have been covered with a playing card, all in the shoulder. The buffalo stopped so suddenly that his nose plowed up the ground.
Given the increasing popularity of the .416 Rigby and advent of the .416 Remington, the .416 MRE seemed not to have much appeal. The same was the case with the arrival of a host of .375 caliber cartridges. I found that I could shoot unmodified .510" bullets in my .505 with no signs of excess pressure, so the .500 SRE no longer made much sense. The .577 VSRE was pleasant to shoot with an overall weight of 12 pounds, compared to 8.75 pounds for the .505 SRE. However, the recoil, although not abrupt or painful, forced me to take two steps backward every time I fired it. I concluded that my experience in shooting from odd places, like the top of a termite mound, would not always allow me to take two steps to the rear, so I regrettfully retired it as well. All in all, an interesting exercise, however.
This is the buffalo in question, Kenya, 1974.
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