Traditions die hard. A way back when most rifles were levers with tube magazines, of course the ammunition had to be flat, or round nose. The old time hunters always looked on these as big game killers.
Strangely, when they designed these lever action rifles they also designed excellent, I would even say great, bullets for their ammunition. Even Jack O'Connor has written that the 30-30 is a much better killer than it's ballistics show it should be. All due to the flat nosed 170 grain bullet that all the old manufactureres used. Same is true of the 38-55. Where great numbers of families relied on wild game for meat, the 38-55 was often looked on as the king of the moose killers. I have seen the streaks of black, cut hair, extending on the the clean white snow, behind where moose had taken a 38-55 bullet in the ribs. There the moose tracks in the snow, the black streak on the snow behind them and this way a few yards, the dead moose.
I'll bet Gatehouse would think that looked cool! As a boy, I thought it looked really cool. (Well, some other word to describe what "cool" now means, because we had not yet got that meaning out of cool.)
Strangely, when they designed these lever action rifles they also designed excellent, I would even say great, bullets for their ammunition. Even Jack O'Connor has written that the 30-30 is a much better killer than it's ballistics show it should be. All due to the flat nosed 170 grain bullet that all the old manufactureres used. Same is true of the 38-55. Where great numbers of families relied on wild game for meat, the 38-55 was often looked on as the king of the moose killers. I have seen the streaks of black, cut hair, extending on the the clean white snow, behind where moose had taken a 38-55 bullet in the ribs. There the moose tracks in the snow, the black streak on the snow behind them and this way a few yards, the dead moose.
I'll bet Gatehouse would think that looked cool! As a boy, I thought it looked really cool. (Well, some other word to describe what "cool" now means, because we had not yet got that meaning out of cool.)


















































