- Location
- Hillbilly shack in the boonies
50 cal inline, shooting .451 barnes...
375 h&h
375 h&h
With improvements in technology pertaining to powders and bullets, we are able to do more with less. At one time to increase power, the only solution was to go bigger as bullet design had a useful maximum velocity ceiling of 2150 fps. Now we can depend on bullets to withstand impacts up to 2500 fps. If we can get a .375 bullet to expand to 1" with an impact velocity of 2300 fps and penetrate nearly 3', the .500 bullet that also expands to 1" and penetrates to 3' takes a back seat due to the .375's flatter trajectory. The .416 has a proven track record with flat trajectory and good impact velocity, and I would be equally happy with the ballistics of either rifle.
My old 375 Browning has taken numerous Moose, White tail and Mulie bucks and a couple Pronghorn Antelope when I lived on the Prairies.
My 458 which I sold last year took a Bull Moose and a nice boar Grizzly several years ago by Tumbler Ridge.
My 404 Jeffery has taken a Yukon Moose and a couple Mountain Caribou.
Big bore rifles include those with bore diameters ranging from .40 to .70
Don't own any big bores. Don't want to shoot any big bores. Recoil and accurate rifle shooting are opposites IMHO.
Big bore rifles do NOT need to be hard recoiling and CAN be VERY VERY accurate.

and a 375 RUM not counting lever guns, I hunt with the 375 H&H have shot moose with it. The others I just play with. You might say I kinda like guns with big holes in them. Do I need them No! But you never know.


YOU are holding out my friend, not a mention of your REAL big bore??
If 50BMG counts as a big bore I have hunted deer and other assorted N.A. big game with 1 , it typically kills things dead.![]()



























