T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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891.1 | The "Killer" and the "Gentleman" | DECALP::HOHWY | Just another Programmer | Thu Jan 10 1991 10:50 | 46 |
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Ricardo, never having been to Afrika (maybe I should not
write this :-) but having read the opinion of countless
experts (hopefully a bit more knowledgable than Yours
truely :-), my humble opinion is, that for calibers you probably
could not have made a better choice. I suppose one could
label your two cartridges: "the killer" and "the gentleman".
Unless you go to the .500 A-Square (Alphin's child as you call it :-)
the .460 WHBY is the top of the line in knock down power -
if *you* don't get killed by the recoil there is a much larger
than average chance that whatever you hit will... But I suppose
that even with a cannon, bullet placement is of the utmost
importance. As for the .416 Rigby, it managed to achieve almost
legendary status with bullets of 400 grs at about 2300-2400 fps.
Ross Seyfried (former IPSC world champion and present gun writer,
and African professional hunter - explanation superfluos for
readers of G&A :-) thinks this "gentleman" cartridge is all
you will ever need. In fact I have never read a single line
claiming that the .416 Rigby was not an "ideal" chambering for old
Syncerus caffer - including such African experts as Boddington and
Carmichael. No, I think the "killer" and the "gentleman" is
as good a choice as you can make.
Bolt or express? Well either will do, if as you pointed out
chambered for the right round. If you wanted an express rifle
then a cartridge choice such as the .600 Nitro Express would
probably be the #1. But as you say, as much as express rifles
are a part of the African hunting myth, bolts are a *lot*
cheaper. As many people have pointed out, most African hunting
was and is done with bolt actions. The express rifle was really
always limited to the territories previously governed by the
British - the rest of the world used Mausers and Mauser derivates.
But, hell, if you could afford an express rifle... The main
thing in rifle selection must be dependability - will it
*always* go "booom" when you pull the trigger? Otherwise
it could get very interesting to dig out a wounded Cape Buffalo
from a thicket!
So there is my "unforgettable, "expert" opinion :-)
Now a question: Where, when and for how long are you going?
- Mike
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891.2 | ME no go where "Syncerus Caffer Caffer" go!!! | WFOVX8::DRUMM | it's still all up hill!! | Thu Jan 10 1991 12:14 | 13 |
| Ricardo,
I to have never been to Africa, but if I was I would chose the gun
used by the guide. They deal with this Syncerus Caffer Caffer all the
time. From what I've read and seen in videos, all have been using the
time tested Double rifle in the 375H&H and 400 series cals. They like
the real fast second follow up shot. You just can't work a bolt fast
enough and semi-autos aren't allowed. The double gives you two shots as
fast as you can aim and pull the trigger.
Fo course if you place the bullet "just right" a 22 long will do
;^)
Steve
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891.3 | Doubles or bolts. | DECALP::HOHWY | Just another Programmer | Thu Jan 10 1991 18:28 | 77 |
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Actually Steve, I am sure that most African guides
hump bolt actions around. But the double is part
of the African hunting myth - so for a video about
the great white hunter... Not that doubles are not
great - they are, but they are also costly, AND
to work the most reliably they require rimmed
cartridges. That is why the European (who are
crazy about break top long guns, double rifles or
combination weapons) for many calibers have a
rimmed and a non-rimmed version. Example: 7x64
and 7x65R (rimmed version of the 7x64).
Let me cite some contemporary expertise on Afrikan
hunting (also because this is quite funny):
Jim Carmichel in his "Book of the Rifle" writes:
EXIT THE DOUBLE ENTER THE BOLT
"The professional hunter on one of my early safaris was a
very proper type in the old Kenya tradition whose accent
was as crisp as the tips of his mustache. His Land Rover
was polished daily, and the creases in his hunting shorts
were unfailingly starched to parade-ground sharpness. As
you probably guessed, his rifle was a beautiful Holland
double. It was a .500/465, If I remember correctly, and it
looked as new as the day it left London. Not once during
our safari did he find it necessary to fire his rifle, which
caused him great relief because of the high cost and
scarcity of the ammo.
Another time I hunted with a tough little bandy-legged
Angolan Portuguese who carried a cheap Spanish-made sidelock
double in .450 Nitro. The sears must have been badly worn
because every time he fired the right barrel, the left barrel
went off of its own accord. Despite my suggestions, he never
caught on to shooting the left barrel first or loading only
one round. He shot this rifle at everything from Guniea fowl
to elephants. KA-BOOMBOOM it would go, and the little
Portuguese would stagger backwards.
These two chaps constitute exceptions that prove the rule.
They were the *only* professional African guides with
whom I have hunted who actually carried double rifles,
popular myth not-withstanding." (I like the story about
the Portuguese :-)
Craig Boddington writes in his book "From Mt. Kenya to the
Cape":
"In days gone by, the double was the odds-on choice. I personally
like a heavy double very much. They are fast, give an instant
and reliable second shot, and the old cartridges such as the
.470 or .450-3 1/4 offer the same outstanding performance they
always did. However, I must admit that the nostalgia of the
double is a very large reason for my preference for them. In
use, the bolt action is every bit as good, in some ways better,
and the cost of the very best bolt action is a fraction of the
cost of even a plain, much-used double today.
Even for the professional hunters, the guys who actually have
the use for a charge-stopping rifle, the bolt action has become
the most popular choice. In all the African hunting that I have
done, I have seen a total of seven double rifles in use." ....
(explains who used which double) ... "And that is it for doubles.
In the same period of time I've seen innumerable .458s, a few
.460 Weatherbys, a couple of .416s in various wildcat configurations
as well as the original .416 Rigby, a couple of .404 Jeffreys, and
a few other wildcat big bores".
Whew! That was a lot of writing. But is it not fascinating all this
African business? I am ready to go tomorrow... Ricardo, how
about hitching a ride ... :-)
- Mike
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891.4 | | BRABAM::PHILPOTT | Col I F 'Tsingtao Dhum' Philpott | Fri Jan 11 1991 05:45 | 18 |
|
My granfather used an eight gauge double and a 600 Ross Express double for his
hunting.
I fired the eight gauge once, and it made my shoulder hurt :-)
There is no doubt that a double can deliver the second shot faster than a bolt
but with the heavy recoil of these rifles I suspect the more important factor
is that you can fire the second shot without moving your hands.
The backup should be a second hunter (or guide) with a heavy bolt action.
As for cost, I wonder about the possibility of getting a custom barrel set for
a Valmet 412S double in something suitable? (I have no doubt that though they
call the 9.3x74R a 'big game' cartridge they have in mind more elk hunting
than cape buffalo).
/. Ian .\
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891.5 | RI: 891.1 | ITAMKT::SIMINO | New SW Technologies MKTG Program Mgr. | Wed Feb 06 1991 08:03 | 36 |
| Well,
sorry for the long time of silence but the italian winter has been
really cold, and I taken advantage from im to take the wooping cough.
Anyway! still I'm alive and convinced in participating to a new
safari. All that despite the last world's happenings that are warming
the environment.
To answer to the ....... 891.1 note, I count to go this year in the
large area of Gado Cabo, very close to the Tanzania boarders, at
the South of the famous Selous Game Reserve. This area is still
very rich of wild animals, particular Cape Buffalos Blue Wildebeestes,
Waterbucks lions and ..... (for the pockets full of money)...big
tuskers. Of course my target is the Cape Buffalo coupled with a
waterbuck.
About the 460 Wby Mag. recoil, I'd like to reduce the worries about
it. It's not so terrifying, despite the over one ton per meter of
the muzzle energy. The muzzle brake of the Mark V is vell designed
and, before of the real muzzle brake there's a kind of compensator
made by small holes, that remember the Mag-Na-Port often used in
big hangun revolvers. So the recoil is ..... powerful !!!! but not
so hard like you can suppose. It's...... like a loong puush but
soft push on your shoulder but flate and the "mag-na-port" reduces
the 80% of the rotation. I found harder the recoil of a 8x57 shot
by a Kar98 Mauser because, despite smaller is more "crude". About
the 416 Rigby ...... no comment! It is my preferred bore for waterbuck
or blue wildbeest. As I've already told it collects the best qualities
of the 375H&H and of the 458WM: flat trajectory and good muzzle
energy.
I wonder why hadn't the success of the other cartriges.
Riccardo
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891.6 | When, where, how long ... :-) | DECALP::HOHWY | Just another Programmer | Wed Feb 06 1991 09:25 | 46 |
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Riccardo, so it's Tanzania this year for you, eh?
Selous Game Reserve sounds pretty adventurous!
From your note it sounded like you had not booked
a hunt for cats - so presumably you did not have to
meet the 21 day minimum duration? How long will you
actually be going for? Are you going alone, or with
a friend/wife... Who is the safari company that you
have booked with? Where did you go the last time?
Sorry, I know that was a lot of questions :-).
Where are you based Riccardo, Milan, Toriono? Your
nodename sounds like you work in Italien marketing.
Is that correct?
RE: .416 Rigby. Well, for a long time after the
second world war it was pretty difficult to come
by ammunition for the Rigby. Besides, the .416
requires a true magnum action - and I suppose
that is why no factory produced rifles were chambered
for this round for a long time. The period after
the second world war was the period of the short
magnums - cramming even large bores into 30-06
length actions. Now those new rifles may not have
been as nice nor as powerful as what could be had
in pre-war calibers, but they were readily available,
a lot cheaper and so was the ammo! The .375 H&H on
the other hand was not really a big bore, so it
had access to a more general market -big bears, elk,
moose... Besides, the action required for the .375 H&H
was not a true magnum. It was really only with the
advent of the Weatherby rifles (both in their
Shultz & Larsen disguise and the Japanese Mk V action)
that a rifle was chambered for true magnum length
calibers (378, 460). These days, the big bores have
started a great comeback, hardly a day seems to pass
by without the announcement of a new magnum action.
And what is more, the manufacturers have gotten their
eyes open to the "classic" rounds such as the .416 Rigby.
From that point of view, we really are priviledged!
Cheers.
- Mike
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891.7 | Gulf War effect | LUPO::SIMINO | AI Marketing Program Mgr. - Italy | Fri Mar 22 1991 17:08 | 23 |
| Re .6
Well, sorry for the delay but the Gulf War has compelled me to re
analize my plans. Actually the organization who's arranging my trip
is planning again a new trip. So, not yet I know what will be the best
moment to tackle the big trip. Meanwhile I've enriched my rifle
collection with another Weatherby that I count to use for the blue
wildebest and waterbuck. It's a 300 Wthby using a Swarovski 3-12x50
scope (Weatherby alias Redfield scopes are too much delicate.... this's
my felling after that the 460 hasdamaged its with the recoil). About my
trip I count to go with a friend of mine (he likes too Buffalos... not
cats) who's a beatiful Express made by Perugini & Visini in 458WM.
Our staying should about 12 days long including the staying.
Yes! I live in Milano where there's a beatiful team fond of rifles
and... of course big game and... of course, i work in Marketing.
I'll provide more detailed info as my trip will be defined.
Cheers
Riccardo
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