Tundra Tiger
AH legend
for what its worth i have shot 4 brown bears with it. works pretty good on them, but, 200 yards is a pretty long poke at any brown bear with any rifle.
Totally agree.
for what its worth i have shot 4 brown bears with it. works pretty good on them, but, 200 yards is a pretty long poke at any brown bear with any rifle.
I mean..the nitro express cartridges are hitting 125+ years young now..I think that with the proper bullet and load the old 46-70 would be perfectly fine on a DG hunt.
It would be no different than those who choose to use a pistol, and I believe that it would be a lot more effective.
There are those on here that believe that nothing smaller than a 20mm cannon should be used. But if you know the capabilities and wait for that perfect broadside shot it should work quite well.
It all depends on the bullet and how much velocity can you get. I load for a friend’s 450 NE double. He has a shoulder injury and can’t take full recoil. For his softs I load 295gr. Cutting edge safari raptors, and for solids I use 325gr. Safari solids at 2150 fps. To date he has killed 4 Cape buffalo and a 60 lb. Elephant. If you’re 45-70 is strong enough for that bullet and velocity, then I seriously doubt the animal will react any differently because of the case you used. By the way, there was no tracking required for any of these animals. With this type of bullet, sectional density means nothing. And don’t let anyone tell you otherwise.
No. Not enough gun. It is fun for "wannabee's" but not anyone with a centigram of sense would use it on DG.
Agree 100%What about…???
Bow Hunting?
Handgun Hunting?
Black Powder Express Rife Hunting?
And the list goes on.
We celebrate someone when they write a report on using a 150 year old BPE rife and retuning the rife back to Africa for its intended purpose.
A 45-70 is more than capable with the right load and the right shot placement. Is there better choices, yes. Is there a better choice than the 375 H&H that we all holding to such high standards, yes the 416 Rigby and so on.
I have seen a lot of very capable men take a lot of animals with not so capable cartridges. On the other hand I have seen a lot of “so called men” have trouble with taking animals with very capable cartridges.
Know your rifle.
Know your cartridge.
Know yourself.
And know your own limitations!
By the way I personally think bow hunting DG is one of the most inhumane ways to take an animal and just plan stupid.
You are 100% correct.The .45/70 was never intended to be a big-game cartridge.
It just "filled the bill" for a while until another militarily cartridge came along for the U.S.A.
The .30-40 Krag had a short run.
Then, it was the .30/06 Springfield....
And, the USA hasn't won a war since we quit using the .30/06...
Just saying...
A buddy and me both used Ruger no.1's on cape last summer. Mine in 500ne, his in 416 rigby. Though you only get the one shot, I find that the strength of a no.1 action is almost a cheat code! We did a lot of load dev together, and found that our shoulders were giving out long before we could find any issues with the gun accepting hotter loads.I talked to Craig Boddington about this very question. I was considering taking a Ruger No 1 for Cape Buffalo. I had worked up a load with 500 gr Hornadys and its ballistics were not far off a 458 Win Mag and Mr Boddington's opinion was that with the strength of the Ruger action, proper bullet and placement it would be fine. I never did use it for Cape Buffalo but it sure ventilated a bull moose.
A buddy and me both used Ruger no.1's on cape last summer. Mine in 500ne, his in 416 rigby. Though you only get the one shot, I find that the strength of a no.1 action is almost a cheat code! We did a lot of load dev together, and found that our shoulders were giving out long before we could find any issues with the gun accepting hotter loads.
I was able to get my 500ne to shoot 600gr NFs to 2250 before I stopped.
His 416 was getting 400gr NFs to just shy of 2600 when he stopped.
In both cases there were no pressure signs on the guns or brass. On our shoulders was another story. So using a no.1 in 45-70 where you are reloading I have no doubt you could get something like a 450/480gr solid or cup point solid up to a velocity where it would completely penetrate a buff on a broad side.
I hope that you will rethink this before ever going to the field to put it to practice. Reason being, honestly it is a poor choice. I know, because I did it and it was a poor choice 23 years ago, and its still a poor choice, especially in light that we now have real Super Bullets for 45/70 being done solid copper and solid brass, that will not distort as easy as even super hard cast bullets. Cast Performance back in the day was and maybe still is about as hard as it gets. When these contact bone, or harder material, the big meplat simply just shears off, leaving you with a smaller pointy bullet. In softer tissue, such as behind the shoulder, no bone contact, it distorts really seriously, which is ok for transferring trauma, but not so good if you need deep penetration.I for one wouldn't hesitate to use for example the buffalo bore 430 super hard cast flat meplate solid at 1925 fps on buffalo or anything else big
Tundra, I am assuming you are shooting a 18 inch Marlin....... if so, they can handle 45000 PSI without issue, in the below work I use RL 7 and you can easy do 2050 to 2100 fps with the 325 without getting in any trouble. Do not exceed this load, as RL 7 is very inconsistent, and My RL 7 will not be YOUR RL 7, but if you can match velocity that I have listed, then your pressures will be very close if not the same..........On my 2... I used a 325 grain brass solid that left my 18 inch barrel at something like 1900 fps -
325 #13 Lever Solid | ||||||||
8/22/14 | 325 Lever Solid | 54/RL 7 | Fed 210 | 2067 | 2026 | 41 | 2047 | 43000 PSI |
44100 | 42000 | 2100 | 43000 | |||||
12/12/20 | 325 Lever Solid | 54/RL 7 | Win | 2104 | 2070 | 34 | 2087 | X2-Test 2016 RL7 1# Unit |
I don't think comparing a 9.3x74r and a 45-70 is proper, and the math tends to agree.I think some people are getting stopping rifles and killing rifles mixed up. Is a 45-70 a stopping rifle on bears, yes..is it a stopping rifle on cape Buffalo, no, or I wouldn't use it as such, just like a 9.3x74R is a stopping rifle on bears, but not cape Buffalo...both will kill them though, if properly loaded.
I will wait the the 416 Creedmore to come out.![]()
.45-70 - Wikipedia
en.wikipedia.org
1,189 to 3,489 depending on loading...
I don't understand why someone would want to travel 2,000 miles to shoot at something with a 150 year old cartridge, just because they can.
I think the animal deserves better.
@Flbt - with full power ammo & hard cast bullets - as made by Buffalo Bore and others - you can get 350 - 400 gr bullets moving at 2000-2150 fps and 3600 ft lbs…Plenty for any Griz inside of 150 yrds and further if you are sighted in for that. I know they are used in Africa too but I did NOT use mine in Africa - even though my PH spoke highly of the .45-70 for Buffalo and said he had many killed with that caliber. It is a hard hitting round with large frontal mass but not a flat shooter. Some unfamiliar with the potential of the .45-70 because it is often used with only slower Cowboy Action power loads but Full Power loads make a world of difference —- and the recoil is substantial too because the Lever action rifles are light and KICKI have seen a lot of 9.3 questions.
And I have read about people using the 45-70 on buffalo.
I do know a man that used one on the water buff that are on hunting ranchers/ operation in fl. He use the 405 gr jsp. But he shot it in the head. So anything that would get through the skull would be enough on that shot.
Any thoughts on its use on the big bears and buffalo up?
I have used it on hogs no problem I would use it on black bear.
But o am not sure about anything bigger.
@Safari Dave - lots of 100+ year old cartraige killing buff, ele etc.. (.470 NE, 416 Rigby etc..). Agree the Animal deserves a clean quick kill — but doesn’t get to pick the rifle.![]()
.45-70 - Wikipedia
en.wikipedia.org
1,189 to 3,489 depending on loading...
I don't understand why someone would want to travel 2,000 miles to shoot at something with a 150 year old cartridge, just because they can.
I think the animal deserves better.
I have had one for years@Flbt - with full power ammo & hard cast bullets - as made by Buffalo Bore and others - you can get 350 - 400 gr bullets moving at 2000-2150 fps and 3600 ft lbs…Plenty for any Griz inside of 150 yrds and further if you are sighted in for that. I know they are used in Africa too but I did NOT use mine in Africa - even though my PH spoke highly of the .45-70 for Buffalo and said he had many killed with that caliber. It is a hard hitting round with large frontal mass but not a flat shooter. Some unfamiliar with the potential of the .45-70 because it is often used with only slower Cowboy Action power loads but Full Power loads make a world of difference —- and the recoil is substantial too because the Lever action rifles are light and KICK
@Flbt - I like the .45-70 Levolution .325 gr out of my Marlin 1895 for Deer at close range (up to 125 yds)..it makes a big hole & exits whitetail consistently. Also, recoil is moderate compared to anything from Buffalo Bore - which loosen my teeth. But for Bear over bait or treed by Hounds - Buffalo Bore 350 or 405 grain is devastating and exits from almost any angle - Texas Heart shot etc….I have had one for years
Just here there nothing big unless you go to a ranch .
I have use the 300gr hp and sp
The 405 gr jsp safe of any rifle
A few hardcast loads
And the 325 hornday for the most point
I was thinking about the extreme penatraters but have seen some interesting bullets on this. Thread .
The problem with the 45-70 is their are three power levels to it, black powder pressure, lever guns and ruger No1 and a few bolt actions. The latter sto ger actions with a 450 to 500gr bullet put it on the heels of a 458 win. Still not a stopping rifle though. I own both the 45-70 ruger in a no3 and a 9.3x74R in a drilling. They both kill above their weight class, but I would still only call them a bear or moose stopping rifle. That was the point I was trying to make, that their is a difference in killing and stopping. My comparison is that both are minimal for cape Buffalo and would need a PH with a good set under him and a stopping rifle, to back you up.I don't think comparing a 9.3x74r and a 45-70 is proper, and the math tends to agree.
-On kinetic energy
The 9.3 is around 3400ft lbs.
The 45-70 is around 2800ft lbs.
-On sectional density
The 9.3 with a 285 runs around .305
The 45-70 with a 325 runs around .221
-On velocity
The 9.3 runs 2300-2400 fps
The 45-70 runs 1800-2000
All of this comes together to make the 9.3 penetrate much much deeper, and with a quality bullet is much more likely to make it through the boiler room. The wider, slower, and lower sectional density of the 45-70 is always going to limit is penetration compared to a 9.3 when using the same bullet type. And a smaller hole through the lungs is always better than a bigger hole that does not make it to the lungs.
I do agree on the notion that there is a difference between a killing and stopping rifle. But given the two choices: 45-70 vs 9.3x74 I would wager the majority of AFH members would vote for the 9.3
The problem with the 45-70 is their are three power levels to it, black powder pressure, lever guns and ruger No1 and a few bolt actions. The latter sto ger actions with a 450 to 500gr bullet put it on the heels of a 458 win. Still not a stopping rifle though. I own both the 45-70 ruger in a no3 and a 9.3x74R in a drilling. They both kill above their weight class, but I would still only call them a bear or moose stopping rifle. That was the point I was trying to make, that their is a difference in killing and stopping. My comparison is that both are minimal for cape Buffalo and would need a PH with a good set under him and a stopping rifle, to back you up.
@Boone66 - since I did Not use my .45-70 on my Buff hunt - I have No experience…but my PH would disagree and I respected his opinion because he had direct experience and saw “many clients” (his description) kill buffalo with .45-70. My logic would include the fact that a 45 cal - 400 gr bullet (solid or Hardcast) @2000 fps is a STOPPER regardless of what gun fires it…and a Lever action is as reliable as a bolt action w/faster follow up shots. But, I liked any excuse to buy another rifle so I went with a .470 NE—— ended up I didn’t shoot that rifle as well as my Marlin1895 and wish I saved $14,000 and just took my .45-70The problem with the 45-70 is their are three power levels to it, black powder pressure, lever guns and ruger No1 and a few bolt actions. The latter sto ger actions with a 450 to 500gr bullet put it on the heels of a 458 win. Still not a stopping rifle though. I own both the 45-70 ruger in a no3 and a 9.3x74R in a drilling. They both kill above their weight class, but I would still only call them a bear or moose stopping rifle. That was the point I was trying to make, that their is a difference in killing and stopping. My comparison is that both are minimal for cape Buffalo and would need a PH with a good set under him and a stopping rifle, to back you up.
im not saying they are unreliable, just the rugers no1 and no3 and bolt guns can take a higher pressure is all, so put them a step above the lever guns and several steps from a trap door, is all.@Boone66 - since I did Not use my .45-70 on my Buff hunt - I have No experience…but my PH would disagree and I respected his opinion because he had direct experience and saw “many clients” (his description) kill buffalo with .45-70. My logic would include the fact that a 45 cal - 400 gr bullet (solid or Hardcast) @2000 fps is a STOPPER regardless of what gun fires it…and a Lever action is as reliable as a bolt action w/faster follow up shots. But, I liked any excuse to buy another rifle so I went with a .470 NE—— ended up I didn’t shoot that rifle as well as my Marlin1895 and wish I saved $14,000 and just took my .45-70