sestoppelman
AH ambassador
The main point is this. If a good bullet is driven by a good powder that was ignited properly, it will perform as it should irrespective of the case's headstamp.
Spike.t
I just went to the Kynoch website and they show 458 win mag ammo. They may not have had it back in the 60's though.
david little owns kynamco and has the the rights to the use of the kynoch name. he started loading a lot of the old british calibres including some obscure ones and gave them a new lease of life. he does load a few "new" ones as well, but you are basically talking about two different companies, with the old kynoch then owned by imperial metal industries stopping loading sporting ammunition by the late 1960`s to early 1970. which is why winchester developed the .458 to replicate the performance of the .450/.470 nitro cartridges, along with the fact that americans were starting to go hunting in africa in increasing numbers and needed a reasonably priced big bore rifle/cartridge combo . unfortunately with the problems with the powder this didnt happen and led to the bad early reputation of this cartridge, but with new powder developments the problems were cured.
Thanks for the education. I wasn't aware of all this. I don't think I have seen any Kynoch ammo since 1970......now I know why.
The main point is this. If a good bullet is driven by a good powder that was ignited properly, it will perform as it should irrespective of the case's headstamp.
Yes , you are correct...Richard Harland re-load his own ammo, maybe one reason why he never experienced the early difficulties related to the .458 Win Mag loads that gave the .458 Win Mag such a bad reputation..Check the reloading manuals. Due to modern powders the 458 Win Mag is more than it once was. 2150 fps is a given, which makes it the equal of the storied cartridges of old.