Viral_SIGness
AH fanatic
I was wondering that myself. I thought I had just missed something.so what does jarra wood have to do with the 338 calibre?
bruce.
I was wondering that myself. I thought I had just missed something.so what does jarra wood have to do with the 338 calibre?
bruce.
modern brass combined with sensible handloading practice will deal with those issues.
bruce.
Stuck Ruger. He didn't know it was stuck until after the Lion was down, but stuck none the less.One should consider the .375 Ruger / .416 Ruger / .416 Remington Magnum as having modern brass. Al three are very high pressure cartridges compared to the .416 Rigby, and they have almost parallel sides.
Our experience is (and I read it in these pages as well) that visiting hunters think that Africa animals are tough (which they are not), so most first time visitors for partcularly Cape buffalo try and squeeze every last meter/sec of velocity out of his cartridge. If it is a modern .416s their modern brass already needs 65,000 psi to equal the Rigby with its 47,000 psi, and if the visitor had done his load development in a cold atmosphere and he hunts in Southern Africa when even midwinter the midday temperature may be 100 degrees F he WILL experience overpressure and difficult extraction - or even a stuck case. Have seen and heard about too many of those to ignore it.
I have quite a bit personal as well as observed experience in the Niassa Province of Mozambique with the .416 Rigby on everything from Cape buffalo to the little duiker antelope and everything inbetween. No matter the temperature, its well angled sides and low pressure makes for day after hot day consistently easy extraction. There is a reason why the majority of local PHs prefer the .416 Rigby and .375 H&H as their back-up riles.
About tough animals: Blue wildebeest, oryx, kudu, red hartebeest are sissies compared to elk or mule deer as they fall every day all over the country to single bullets from the most popular elk size hunting cartridge in South Africa, namely the .308W. There is honestly no need for anything more powerful than a 30-06 here.
Spot on. .458 3" is very popular here as its a cheap conversion and you get sufficient velocity/power without having to risk high pressures. .450 Ackley is very similar and a good design.Both great calibers, but from what I've learned about Africa hunting, they wouldn't be preferred choices. Seems they prefer lower pressures, to prevent extraction issues in the extreme heat. That's why the .416 Rigby is still so popular. The .416 Rem Mag and .416 Ruger (.416 Roy is a lot more powerful, but very high pressures) are nearly identical in power, but the huge Rigby case does it at much lower pressures, and that's a big deal when you're about to be trampled. The last thing you want is a sticky case. The .458 Win Mag suffered that fate in the beginning, and it still isn't popular on the dark continent.
I've also learned, when it comes to PH/Guides, they have .458 Lotts opened up to accept the .458 3". So again, they get the Lott power, at much lower pressures.
By the way, I'm not knocking anyone's choices, or favorites. Just merely sharing what I've learned, and making conversation.
This is true, but the 375 Ruger is a nice , compact round, and it will not give any problems if loaded to sensible pressures/velocities.Stuck Ruger. He didn't know it was stuck until after the Lion was down, but stuck none the less.
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Yes it is, I just bought one myself.This is true, but the 375 Ruger is a nice , compact round, and it will not give any problems if loaded to sensible pressures/velocities.
@sestoppelmanIts a fine cartridge. My Ruger 77 shoots it very well with most bullet weights. It can be loaded down to like 35 Whelen or .338-06 ballistics for less recoil and still be plenty of power for PG. Load up some 250 or 275 gr bullets and its good for eland or even buff with the right bullets. Have full confidence in mine.
In my book, and having used this calibre for around 20 years, its the best all round freely available/non custom calibre for Southern Africa.
If you are only hunting in the bush areas then 9.3 x 62 (which I also own) is possibly a better choice just because of the reduced Velocities and higher cross sectional area, but there isn't a lot in it. I certainly don't think the animals can feel the difference. 9.3 is also not as versatile. ( a 9.3/.338 probably would be, but that's a wildcat. the .338 Sabi, which is a bit milder than the .338 WM is also popular, but more in bush country.
A good second rifle for Africa is a smaller, flat shooting calibre. There are many options to choose from - from .243 to 7mm Rem Mag. These are excellent for springbuck, blesbuck, black wildebeest, mountain reedbuck, etc. as those species are typically shot in open grassland or mountainous terrain.
A shotgun is also a good option as there is frequently good wing shooting to be had.
Do not bring a rifle under .243 as they are generally not allowed on anything except very small game (hares, jackals, etc) - so really a waste of time.
An acquaintance took a .338 to Africa with premium projectiles for plains game and after loseing an Eland traded it for a .416RM (bad shot placement). Just take the .375H&H for everything.
If you want (IMO you don't need) two rifles on safari go a 7mm and .375 or .30-06 and .450+. The .338 and .375 are too close.
I totally agree. They work OK at fairly long ranges (200M plus); however there are better long range bullets - and they basically explode at bush ranges , with limited penetration and massive internal trauma. Definitely not suitable for thick skinned or heavy boned animals. The Sako hammerhead also tends to shed its jacket at bush ranges. Swift A frames perform wonderfully , even with full power loads a bush ranges. Expansion i adequate and penetration is outstanding. I have yet to recover one.the 210 nosler partition is one bullet i would never again use due to failure.
i would particularly avoid it on big animals like eland for any but a sideways on lung shot.
this also applies to the 9.3 mm 286 gn partition.
look to swift, and you will have a far better gun for all target presentations.
bruce.