Large Caliber Recoil Chart

x84958

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Hi all,

I decided to create this chart for ease of reference. Hopefully it's helpful to someone out there! I used the .375H&H as the baseline for "relative recoil" analysis.

.375H&H to .500 NE. I can add additional calibers and weights if interested, just DM me.

Screenshot 2025-01-14 at 9.34.22 AM.png
 
Thanks for sharing. AH member Mark Ouellette posted a very thorough and comprehensive recoil chart of various rifles several months ago back on AH. Always interesting to see.
 
hi,

i too appreciate the thought of this chart, however:

there is no way that the 450/400 has MORE recoil than the 416 rigby in the same weight rifle.

the 400 gr bullet of the 450/400 is traveling at 2050-2150 fps

the 400 gr bullet of the 416 rigby is traveling at 2300-2400+ fps

the rigby will ALWAYS have more recoil.
 
interesting chart, I calculate all this stuff with JBM Recoil Calculator all the time. Lots of variable with load and rifle weight
 
I thank you for the effort/thoughfulness of sharing this.

What weight rifle are we comparing?
I should've mentioned that. My apologies for not mentioning that earlier! This is using a 10lb rifle for all calibers.

Here's a new chart with several other calibers for those curious.

Screenshot 2025-01-14 at 10.55.05 AM.png
 
Last edited:
That looks like all my data, spot on, well done sir
 
hi,

i too appreciate the thought of this chart, however:

there is no way that the 450/400 has MORE recoil than the 416 rigby in the same weight rifle.

the 400 gr bullet of the 450/400 is traveling at 2050-2150 fps

the 400 gr bullet of the 416 rigby is traveling at 2300-2400+ fps

the rigby will ALWAYS have more recoil.
ah thanks for the correction!
 
I apologize for nitpicking, but a 416 bullet shot at the same velocity from the same weighted rifle, will have a different recoil energy and velocity in 416 Rem vs 416 Rigby. This is due to the amount of powder burned to obtain the same velocity (different case volume and pressure). The powder burned becomes ejecta and it adds up to the equation. Hence Rigby will recoil more and by a quantifiable amount to be recorded in the table as such.
Thank you for sharing your work with us.
 
I apologize for nitpicking, but a 416 bullet shot at the same velocity from the same weighted rifle, will have a different recoil energy and velocity in 416 Rem vs 416 Rigby. This is due to the amount of powder burned to obtain the same velocity (different case volume and pressure). The powder burned becomes ejecta and it adds up to the equation. Hence Rigby will recoil more and by a quantifiable amount to be recorded in the table as such.
Thank you for sharing your work with us.
Thanks for the education! I'll work a bit on those finer details for the next iteration. I used the chart just for relative comparison.
 
I should've mentioned that. My apologies for not mentioning that earlier! This is using a 10lb rifle for all calibers.

Here's a new chart with several other calibers for those curious.

View attachment 658067
THANK YOU! THIS IS A GREAT BASELINE FOR COMPARISON. With this, it confirms I say NO way to a 505 Gibbs & 500 Jeffrey. I'll stick with my 11 1/2 pound 500 NE!!!
 
Thanks for sharing. AH member Mark Ouellette posted a very thorough and comprehensive recoil chart of various rifles several months ago back on AH. Always interesting to see.

@x84958 This is good work!
I posted a thread with detailed tables concerning recoil on July 30, 2024 that may interest you.

This is one of my recoil tables
1736876580051.png
 
@x84958 This is good work!
I posted a thread with detailed tables concerning recoil on July 30, 2024 that may interest you.

This is one of my recoil tables
View attachment 658073
This is much better! Thanks for this!
 
Thanks for posting.
It’s a simple comparison to put things in perspective for anyone considering stepping up.
 
I apologize for nitpicking, but a 416 bullet shot at the same velocity from the same weighted rifle, will have a different recoil energy and velocity in 416 Rem vs 416 Rigby. This is due to the amount of powder burned to obtain the same velocity (different case volume and pressure). The powder burned becomes ejecta and it adds up to the equation. Hence Rigby will recoil more and by a quantifiable amount to be recorded in the table as such.
Thank you for sharing your work with us.
Same deal with 458 WM vs 470 NE. Same ballistics, very different case capacities.
 

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