Hornady makes bullets for the 405..........I have gobs of them in both spritzer and flat nose..........use them in my 2 original 95s.
Just received my new .375H&H 1885 today...gee, I wonder where that came from?Won't be able to shoot it till tomorrow, but first impressions are good. The wood is not spectacular, but quite presentable...not an eyesore like many wood stocks today are. Well-fitted recoil pad, nice bluing and polish. The trigger is crisp and quite shootable; the hammer cocking action has a very different "feel" than I am accustomed to with the B78, with which I have a long history. I've briefly played with a couple of the newer 1885's but don't recall if they had this sensation to the operation of the hammer. I understand there were some internal modifications between the two guns, which may explain this?
I need to find some scope mounts pronto, but I'll be playing with the irons until then; I have high hopes that this gun will be a keeper. New Winchester leverguns leave me cold, with their idiotic and unnecessary tang safety. Thank goodness they haven't butchered the 1885 design with that idea...yet. This gun is actually drilled and tapped for a tang sight!
Incidentally, I have managed to resist the temptation of buying this gun for several years now...so to all who posted and contributed to this thread: I hate you!![]()
Small world...I took advantage of the insanely warm weather today (+4C...unheard of here in mid-Feb) and made some noise with mine as well. I knew up front that I needed a scope, but I wanted to sight in the irons now in case I ever have to rely on them in the future. As it turned out, I never even touched them; right out of the box the gun grouped about 3 inches high at 100 yards, and windage was near perfect. A good omen...
I am also planning on using the Talley mounting system. I have a number of scopes on hand, will have to play around to see what feels right. Odds are it'll be either a 3-9x40mm Leupold or a 2-8x36mm Bausch & Lomb, both in gloss finish. I don't have the rings in hand, so am unsure about how high they are (using lows), but if there is room the nod will probably go to the Leupold. The .375 has enough ranging capability to use that power range (especially with that nice long barrel), and there will probably be room for the 40mm objective.
Many shooters like a 1-4 or 1.5-5 straight-tube scope on a .375, and they look good...they have that dangerous-game-rifle visual appeal. I like those scopes on some rifles, but they just give up too much at first and last light for me to put one on a serious multi-purpose gun like a .375.
Small world...I took advantage of the insanely warm weather today (+4C...unheard of here in mid-Feb) and made some noise with mine as well. I knew up front that I needed a scope, but I wanted to sight in the irons now in case I ever have to rely on them in the future. As it turned out, I never even touched them; right out of the box the gun grouped about 3 inches high at 100 yards, and windage was near perfect. A good omen...
I am also planning on using the Talley mounting system. I have a number of scopes on hand, will have to play around to see what feels right. Odds are it'll be either a 3-9x40mm Leupold or a 2-8x36mm Bausch & Lomb, both in gloss finish. I don't have the rings in hand, so am unsure about how high they are (using lows), but if there is room the nod will probably go to the Leupold. The .375 has enough ranging capability to use that power range (especially with that nice long barrel), and there will probably be room for the 40mm objective.
Many shooters like a 1-4 or 1.5-5 straight-tube scope on a .375, and they look good...they have that dangerous-game-rifle visual appeal. I like those scopes on some rifles, but they just give up too much at first and last light for me to put one on a serious multi-purpose gun like a .375.




























