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.375 H&H vs the other .375's
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one of us
Picture of Gatehouse
posted
Recently we have the .375 Ultra Mag appearing, and of course there's a whole bunch of other .375 cartridges- There'
s improved models and Saeed uses a .375/404 if I'm not mistaken...and I'm sure a .375 WSM is just around the corner

What does the .375 Ultra (or the rest) offer over the old .H&H, in practical hunting situations?

 
Posts: 3082 | Location: Pemberton BC Canada | Registered: 08 March 2001Reply With Quote
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Picture of Deerdogs
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Efficiency, devoid of charisma.
 
Posts: 1978 | Location: UK and UAE | Registered: 19 March 2001Reply With Quote
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I liked Deerdogs comment.

I shoot a Ackley Improved at 100 to 150 fps above the H&H. Trajectory is the primary benefit I get. I don't find the recoil bad comparted to the 378 Weatherby. I get 2700-2800fps out of 300 gr bullets and 2950-3000fps out of GS Customs 270 gr bullets.

It shoots very accurately and, after 500+ rounds shot in the last 6 month, one of my favorite rifles to shoot.

Good Hunting
Steve

------------------
Every man dies, but not every man really lives!!

 
Posts: 439 | Location: Kansas by way of Colorado and Montana | Registered: 04 April 2001Reply With Quote
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The new breed of .375's does very little to improve the already outstanding qualitys of the H&H round. The only thing that these new guys on the block are going to give you,( besides less money in your wallet ) is more noise and an almost undetectable flatening of the trajectory. If the .375 H&H isn't doing it for you, then you prbably are not going about it right in the first place.

------------------
JR

 
Posts: 1258 | Location: Colusa CA U.S.A. | Registered: 27 June 2001Reply With Quote
<BigBores>
posted
JR,

Uh-oh, I should warn you, some guys don't like to hear the truth here. You might become as unpopular as me! LOL.

 
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<buffalo_buster>
posted
Gatehouse,
In all practical purposes the "other" .375's don't offer anything much over the tested H&H. Flat trajectory might count in a 1000 yard benchrest cartridge but it really doesn't matter if one .375 prints 2.5 inches higher than H&H at 300 yards. How much extra recoil are you absorbing to get that 2.5" ?

The ammo availability is also an issue. You can find H&H ammo anywhere in the world (where legal). Goodluck finding .378 Weatherby.

Plus its just plain fun hunting with a 90 year old cartridge. That sexy long case just shouts "BIG GAME".
BB

 
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<rwj>
posted
I can't help it. I shoot a .378 Wby and it is my favorite rifle. The recoil is not that bad and ammo has never been a problem for me. I hunt here in Alaska where I make my home and I have one trip to Africa under my belt and I have yet found a reason to be sorry for having and shooting a .378. If I want to back the bullet velocities down from 3000 fps+/- to something around 2700 fps, I can do so. This is an excellent cartridge, and as I have said recently in another thread, this cartrdige has been around for 50 years or so itself. I would never bad mouth a .375 H&H, but I will say that I prefer modern ballistics over 19th century ballistics, and I prefer modern bullets and modern rifles, at least for hunting. When properly used, the .378 kills with authority that cannot be denied.
 
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<Chris Long>
posted
I see that Weatherby has re-introduced the .375 Weatherby. I recall reading somewhere that you can safely chamber and fire a .375 H&H cartridge in a rifle chambered for the .375 Weatherby. Anyone know if this is true? If it is, (and if there's no negative impact on the .375 H&H's ballistics) it would seem to give you the best of both worlds...200fps more velocity with the ability to use the available-everywhere .375 H&H in a pinch.

Chris Long

 
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I am almost sure the H&H cartridged will fit in a Weatherby. It does give a bit more at the top end and flexibility in the ammo availability. One problem may be if you are in the wild and get a box of H&H you might best re-zero prior to getting into big or dangerous beasties. GOod hunting. "D"
 
Posts: 1701 | Location: Western NC | Registered: 28 June 2000Reply With Quote
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D. Hunter is right. 375 H&H can shoot in the 375 Weatherby as well as the Ackley Improved I shoot. Your adjustment if standard H&H are shot in Weatherby or one of the other Improved is .5" at 100 yards, 1.5" at 200 yd and 4" at 300 yards. Not too bad of an adjustment.

Good Hunting
Steve

 
Posts: 439 | Location: Kansas by way of Colorado and Montana | Registered: 04 April 2001Reply With Quote
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Picture of Oldsarge
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I get over 2700 measured fps out of my H&H. I get thumbnail size groups out of my H&H. Just what am I supposed to get out of some "improved" version?

Holland's .375: One Planet, One Rifle!

Sarge

 
Posts: 2690 | Location: Lakewood, CA. USA | Registered: 07 January 2001Reply With Quote
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My current 375 H&H will deliver a 300gr bullet at a maximum velocity of 2550fps, same as the two or three I owned before it. My old 375Wby would make 2775fps easily and the effect with 300gr Swifts seemed a bit more violent, at least to me!
Either of the improved 375s will shoot standard 375 ammo if needed, so I cannot imagine a better or more useful caliber. It's like having your cake and eating it too!
 
Posts: 1148 | Location: The Hunting Fields | Registered: 22 May 2002Reply With Quote
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Oldsarge if you are getting 2700 fps out of a 300 gr bullet in 375 H&H you have the fastest barrel I have ever heard of or are shooting at over 70,000 PSI.

What is your load?

Good Hunting
Steve

 
Posts: 439 | Location: Kansas by way of Colorado and Montana | Registered: 04 April 2001Reply With Quote
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Big Bores, I'm not too worried about it. I just like sticking to what works, and the .375 H&H does just that. I would never even think about condeming a man just because he thinks different than I. I just speaketh the truth, and prefer to see a little practicality rather than flash. Take it easy!!!!!!!!!!!!!

------------------
JR

 
Posts: 1258 | Location: Colusa CA U.S.A. | Registered: 27 June 2001Reply With Quote
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Zero'd at 250 yards my 375HH is -11 @ 350 yards with 270 grian Swift Aframes. I don't shoot anything but big game with this rifle so an 11 inch drop at 350 yards is quite easy to deal with. I have shot vervets, baboons, and jackals with this to 300 yards and they are quite small. I have also shot several buffalo and Eland with this so it seems to work on everything from pests at long range to buffalo at close range.

If you feel the need to flatten an already good trajectory and use more powder to achieve the same velocity, and then even more powder to increase it that is your choice. The long slow taper of this case is the reason for it's dependable success for feeding and extraction. Changing that to an improved version you lose part of the original intent and design for dependability. Again up to the user to decide his needs.

My rifle shoots 270 grian bullets handloaded or Hornady factory loads at 2850fps and I have used these loads in dozens of 375HH rifles with not the slightest sign of pressure. My rifle also shoots 300 grain bullets over 2600fps with ease. I have not gone higher as I have never seen the need for that bullet weight to hit any harder than it does. Complete pass through on buffalos when hit in the shoulder is difficult to improve on with another hundred fps or so. With solids I think you will find it difficult to keep them inside from most angles. Faster bullets don't make that better for me.

I think the original 375 Weatherby is likely the best option if a guy decides to improve on his 375HH as the HH ammo will shoot out of it. There was a period of my life where this seemed like a good idea to me. I fortunately came to my senses though and left well enough alone.

The additional velocity will not improve the needs I have for this rifle. Remember though I also sold a 300 weatherby and replaced it with a 30/06 so velocity has never really made a great impression on me from a bullet performance standpoint. Nor has it ever made a trajectory improvment for me out to the 300-350 yard ranges I shoot as a personal limit.

For those that want a flatter shooting rifle to reach way out there, then the improved versions may be the ticket. Remember to use the best bullets money can buy though because that additional velocity will really put the pressure on your projectiles at close range. jj

 
Posts: 1261 | Location: Rural Wa. St. & Ellisras RSA | Registered: 06 March 2001Reply With Quote
<Paul Dustin>
posted
Well guys we all can agree on one thing we all like the .375 caliber no matter what cartridge it is in. I use a 375 JRS MAG and I would not give it a second thought of changing caliber or cartridge.This is the one I enjoy shooting and it works
 
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The 300gr bullet in a .375 at about 2550 fps is about all these old bones of mine can handle in the light-weight rifle I like to shoot. If I wanted a bit more "oomph" and could take the recoil in a rifle I consider portable, I think I would move up a caliber to a .416 with a 400gr bullet at 2400 fps.
Truth be told, I like my .375 even better at about 2500 fps rather than 2550 fps....I don't if the rifle shoots better or if it's me shooting better with just a little less bouncing around.
 
Posts: 4360 | Location: Sunny Southern California | Registered: 22 May 2002Reply With Quote
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Picture of Oldsarge
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Steve,
Several of us on this and the HuntAmerica forums have commented on the inexplicably fast barrels found on the Whitworth Mark X .375 barrels. Suggestions have ranged from Divine intervention to the hammer forging used by the old Yugoslavian factory that built them. Nothing has ever been proven. I doubt that my load would do the same thing in anything but the same make's barrels HOWEVER, there is a product called Gun Juice which over the course of 10 applications (between shots) fills the pores of the steel and builds up a coating of dry lubricant. It can add over 100 fps to the same load. If you're interested, email me and I'll send you the address of the place. You won't find it advertised anywhere as they sell all they can make as fast as they can make it. It was very favorably reviewed in the American Gunsmith last year.
 
Posts: 2690 | Location: Lakewood, CA. USA | Registered: 07 January 2001Reply With Quote
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Picture of MacD37
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The 375 H&H is the grand daddy of "ALL 375 CHAMBERINGS" The long slopeing case is there for a purpose, the 1-12 twist is perfect for most weights available in .375 dia., and is standard in almost every 375 rifle made, custom or otherwise.

The so-called improvements are only sales gimmics, IMO, excepting the 375 WSM that I'm sure is on the way. Far be it from me to tell anyone else what rifle they must use for any purpose. That is a personal choice, I do think, however, the fact that it requires additional money/powder to get the same velocity,and even more to get any percieved advantage, that can only be measured by a cronograph, that means absolutely nothing to an animal hit by said "IMPROVED" offering. The old 375 H&H, being developed in 1912,is not 19th century ballistics, as RWJ claims, but is a 20th century development, just like his 378 WBY, brought out in 1953, only 41 years later. The 375 H&H was never offered in black powder form, and 2550 fps with a 300 gr bullet is certainly not 19th century ballistics. The 378 WBY has taken 41 years to gain 250 fps with a 300 gr bullet, requireing 41 grs more powder to get. A gain that is only possible with the use of a very long free-bore, and This coupled with the fact that 2550 fps with a 300 gr bullet will pennetrate better than the same bullet at 2700 and the WBY round only shoots 1" flatter than the H&H, at 200 yds. I submit there is not one person that can hold that close at 200 yds under hunting conditions, and the animals hunted with a 375 are not going to know the difference, since the gain in velocity only increases shock, something large animals are not effected by, for the most part.

When you get to the animals that require the use of the 375 H&H, to gain any noticeable killing, or stopping power, one must go up in DIAMETER, AND WEIGHT of the bullet, not faster with the same weight bullet. The animals that justify a 375 or larger bullet, are not effected much by shock, and that is all that is gained by boosting the velocity . The 375 Improved only gains 100 fps gain at best,in a hunting rifle, but requires a lot more powder to get it, and like the 375 WBY Mag, looses the feeding advantage of the oregenal case design. Neither ever got off the ground,with most hunters, because of this lack of real improvement.

The one new cartridge that might have some value is the soon to come out 375 WSM. It will produce almost all the velocity of the 375 H&H, which is ideal, but do it in a short action rifle!

I'm just one of those folks that believes "IF IT AIN'T BROKE, DON'T FIX IT" and the 375 H&H doesn't need fixing!

------------------
..Mac >>>===(x)===>
DUGABOY DESIGNS
Collector/trader of fine double rifles, and African wildlife art

 
Posts: 14634 | Location: TEXAS | Registered: 08 June 2000Reply With Quote
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In reality I shoot an Improved and get 200fps increase. Added cost? On a custom rifle the chamber reamer run up the chamber for a H&H or an Improved is the same. Brass is the same, I use the fire forming to break in the barrel. Dies cost me about $55 more. Powder? It takes about 8 to 10 grains more powder for the 200 fps. Recoil, I haven't noticed much difference. Muzzle blast, about the same as a hot 375 H&H.

The real thing you loose is that the tapered case is one of the smoothest feeding rounds there is.

So what it really comes down to is personal preference. Without that the need for many Magnums doesn't exist. Many of the improvements are percieved.

Another example of this is in the first 300 Mag, the 300 H&H hasn't really been improved upon. It like the 375 H&H fed better that the Improveds. But there was a perceived need and with this being a hobby/sport of personal preference along came the various 300 Magnums.

For years everyone thought that any long range rifle case had to have a belt at the base. Now with the advent of the Ultra Magnums everyone thinks that there shouldn't be a belt.

In the 1950 several gunsmiths/barrel makers, John Buhmiller, Les Bauska and Earl Jackson tried to convience Roy Weatherby that the belt should not be on the 378 Weatherby (and other Weatherby cases) and that the case should be built on the Rigby case. They believed that the case should headspace on the shoulder instead of the belt. It only took 40 years for the manufacturers to start believing that.

Good Hunting
Steve

------------------
Every man dies, but not every man really lives!!

 
Posts: 439 | Location: Kansas by way of Colorado and Montana | Registered: 04 April 2001Reply With Quote
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I really prefer the good old H&H.

Easy to reload and case life is good.

Inherent velocity gives excellent barrel life.

Easy feeding & extraction.

Performs well at ranges I use and recoil is more than manageable.

Just a damned friendly and versatile cartridge.

Nothing wrong with the hotrod .375s for those who want them, but I'll stay with the original.

Regards,

------------------
~Holmes

"Those who appease a tiger do so in the hope that the tiger will eat them last."
-Winston Churchill

 
Posts: 1171 | Location: Wyoming, USA | Registered: 03 June 2000Reply With Quote
<rwj>
posted
I will respond by saying that I round down..1912 is close enough to 1899 for me to refer to that time as the turn of the last century as the 19th century...and there were (and still are)several popular smokeless powder cardtriges that were developed and used from the 1890s on-ward. And if you think the difference between 2500 fps+/- for a 300 grain H&H bullet and 3000 fps for a 300 grain Wby bullet is insignificant, then that is your choice to believe so. And I would argue that the killing power on big game is affected by the added hydrostatic shock produced by increased velocities. I think you should shoot your .375 H&H and be happy in doing so. I know I'm happy with my .378... Enough said.
 
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<Pumba>
posted
Gatehouse,

Thank you for posting this question.

I prefer to shoot a bullet with a sectional density of .340 for serious African animals. In the .375" cartridges that's a 335 grain bullet. A 375 Holland and Holland case has too little capacity for this weight bullet. The 375 Weatherby, the 375 Ackley Improved, the 375 RUM all have the needed capacity.

But, the 375 H&H has been around too long to even think of having hunters choose another, better .375" cartridge over it.

Good Hunting !

[This message has been edited by Pumba (edited 08-04-2001).]

 
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MacD37....the WSM is a late comer. John Lazzeroi pioneered the short-fat case for hunting rifles with his Patriot series with the 0.580" head size...it is shorter and fatter than the WSM and it .30 beats it by at least 150 fps with the 180gr bullet. I have the first .375 based on that case (9.53 HellCat) and I can reach 2600 fps (4500 ftlbs) with the 300gr bullet but in my fairly light rifle the recoil is brutal (for me) and pressure is right on the edge.....2550 fps is easy and more accurate while 2500 fps (4165 ftlbs) is "fun" to shoot and is basically a "one-holer" for 3 shots at 100 yards. The WSM necked up to .375 will probably come up a bit short of this but Kevein Robertson in his book "The Perfect Shot" likes the 300 gr bullet (in the .375) at a velocity of 2450 fps which shouldn't be a problem.
 
Posts: 4360 | Location: Sunny Southern California | Registered: 22 May 2002Reply With Quote
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Anyone speculating on WW coming with a 375WSM might be in for loonnngggggg wait. They can't even get their 7mm or 338 versions to market and they will sell ten times more rifles than the 375 could ever hope to.
Also, the 375 version would be grossly underpowered with 300gr bullets, IMO. The 375 Dakota accomplishes that task rather well already, so if one wants a short 375 it is already here.
The arguments back and forth about the need/lack of need for extra velocity have raged on for years and will never stop. Like others here, I like the extra velocity. But then I like fast cars too!
 
Posts: 1148 | Location: The Hunting Fields | Registered: 22 May 2002Reply With Quote
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I would agree with John S on the 375WSM not coming for a long long time. Probably never.

I think the 375 H&H is such an entrenched caliber, that success for another 375 offering would be extremely limited.

If these forums are any guide, there seems to be plenty of activty with the 338 RUM but none at all with the 375 RUM.

Mike

 
Posts: 7206 | Location: Sydney, Australia | Registered: 22 May 2002Reply With Quote
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quote:
Originally posted by Santala:
Oldsarge if you are getting 2700 fps out of a 300 gr bullet in 375 H&H you have the fastest barrel I have ever heard of or are shooting at over 70,000 PSI.

In my own 375 H&H -- a Remington 700 Limited Classic with a 24 in. barrel -- I get 2740 to 2770 f.p.s from the 300 gr. Sierra boattail bullet using 81.5 gr. of H4350 (Hodgdon's top listed load for this powder and bullet weight), WW cases, and Winchester WLR (non-magnum) primers. I load to an overall length of 3.72 inches. 80.5 gr of the same powder, all else the same, gives me 2720 to 2730 f.p.s.

Using the 270 gr. Speer bullet and 83 gr. of H4350 (again, Hodgdon's top load), all else the same, gives me 2811 f.p.s.

Using 80.5 gr of H4350 and the Hornady 300 gr. FMC bullet, loaded to an overall length so that the case can be crimped on the bullet groove, gave me 2620 f.p.s.

In no instance did I see evidence of too-high pressures with these loads (flattened primers, tight bolt lift, etc.).

All these velocities were chronographed 15 ft. from the rifle muzzle, with a chronograph that is accurate (it doesn't read high with other rifles and bullet weights).

[This message has been edited by LE270 (edited 08-04-2001).]

 
Posts: 5883 | Location: People's Republic of Maryland | Registered: 11 March 2001Reply With Quote
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The fairly new 9,5 x 66 vom Hofe S.E. (also called .375 Westley-Richards) seem to be superior to the large-frame, time-honoured .375 H&H in many respects. Of course, it does not share its glamour :-) Nor its silly belt :-P

Carcano

[This message has been edited by carcano91 (edited 08-04-2001).]

 
Posts: 2452 | Location: Old Europe | Registered: 23 June 2001Reply With Quote
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Picture of Oldsarge
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There are many cartridges that wear a belt for dubious reasons but the H&H's are not among them! Because of the long sloping case and shoulder combination, they feed like dreams but would be likely to have headspace problems if that belt wasn't there. It was originally designed to act as a extra thick "rim" that allowed both the easy use of the Mauser action and headspacing at the rear of the chamber. It accomplishes this admirably and has for nearly a hundred years.
 
Posts: 2690 | Location: Lakewood, CA. USA | Registered: 07 January 2001Reply With Quote
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Picture of Gatehouse
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I was pretty much joking about the 375 WSM. I don't even think Winchester was intending to develop it. I was just poking fun at the "Ultra/Short/Whatever else hype!"

I'd really like to hear Saeed's opinion here. It was while watching his Zim video I thought about the original question, since he was using a cartridge very similar to a .375 Ultra Mag, and Ultra mags may be the most prevelant of the "alternative" magnums.

In any case, there is some pretty decent discussion on this topic going on!

 
Posts: 3082 | Location: Pemberton BC Canada | Registered: 08 March 2001Reply With Quote
<eldeguello>
posted
One thing the larger case .375's DO NOT OFFER OVER THE OLD H&H is efficiency!! All of them take more powder to produce the same speeds as the H&H, and even more to beat it, which of course, they can do!! But if speed is an issue, try the .375 H&H Heavy Magnums that Hornady is making. They are about equal to the old .375 Weatherby (which I hear is being revived!!)
 
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The Hornady Heavy mags do infact increase the velocity. I have a couple of boxes of the 300grn. FMJ's and they do infact beat out the standard 300 grainers by about 100-150 fps. That's not too shabby but a little far from the claimed 200fps increase. Oh well who cares about a miserable 50 fps anyway. These rounds are a fairly good way to slightly modernize the pld H&H if you are so inclined.

------------------
JR

 
Posts: 1258 | Location: Colusa CA U.S.A. | Registered: 27 June 2001Reply With Quote
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OOOPS!!!!! That should read- old H&H, not pld H&H
 
Posts: 1258 | Location: Colusa CA U.S.A. | Registered: 27 June 2001Reply With Quote
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OOOPS!!!!! That should read- old H&H, not pld H&H

------------------
JR

 
Posts: 1258 | Location: Colusa CA U.S.A. | Registered: 27 June 2001Reply With Quote
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Picture of Nitroman
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Posted in Reloading Section: Fireforming The .375 Weatherby.
 
Posts: 1844 | Location: Southwest Alaska | Registered: 28 February 2001Reply With Quote
<allen day>
posted
Some of the newer .375s do offer some performance advantages over the .375 H&H - no question about. However, for the sake of simplicity, shootability, and because I happen to have a very nice rifle in that caliber, I'm sticking with the old Holland & Holland version. It works, it's available, and I love it!

AD

 
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<Dan in Wa>
posted
LE 270
I have the same rifle as you but not as fast.
76.5grs. of W760 gives me 2543fps with the Sierra 300gr.BT. a nice plinking load is 66.0grs. of H4895 with a Speer 235 bullet.
2704fps and shoots 1 holers @ 100yds. How do you get all of that 4350 into that case?
 
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LE270:

How do you get 83 grains of 4350 into an H & H case then seat a 270 grain bullet over it? Even fairly heavily compressed, I can't get quite than much in (fired) cases over a 250 Sierra, using a powder drop tube at that.

 
Posts: 13248 | Location: Henly, TX, USA | Registered: 04 April 2001Reply With Quote
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Picture of jorge
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I'm with the tradtionalists on this one. I get about 2575fps with 300gr Aframes and that's good enough for me. Currently, I'm dead on at 200 yards and about a 1.5" group at that distance. I personally like the 300grainer over the 270 but some folks here have excellent results with the 270s. JJ, I was "with you" until you traded you 300 Weatherby for an 06'. The difference there is geometric in both trajectory AND killing power.
 
Posts: 7149 | Location: Orange Park, Florida. USA | Registered: 22 March 2001Reply With Quote
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quote:
Originally posted by Stonecreek:
How do you get 83 grains of 4350 into an H & H case then seat a 270 grain bullet over it? Even fairly heavily compressed, I can't get quite than much in (fired) cases over a 250 Sierra, using a powder drop tube at that.

Well, note that this is HODGDON 4350, not IMR 4350. And it's a recent lot of H4350 that I bought sometime in the second half of 2000. (Sorry, I don't have the lot number, although I could get it if anyone really needs it.) Although it does not have the SC (short cut) designation, this powder does have shorter cut granules than IMR 4350.

If you go to p. 21 of Hodgdon's phamphlet, "Basic Reloaders Manual 2000," you will see that 83.0 is listed as a compressed max load for a 270 gr. bullet in the 375 H&H. I've loaded this load numerous times, and it is admittedly a heavily compressed load, but it works for me. (I always weigh each individual load, with a RCBS 505 scale.)

On January 15, 2001, I shot a four-shot string of this load -- 270 gr. Speer
BT, 83 gr. of H4350, Winchester Case, WLR primer, 3.72" overall length. The velocities were 2880, 2873, 2877, and 2876. The 100-yard group measured 1.59"

On the same day I shot a 3-shot group with the 300 gr. Sierra BT bullet and 81.5 gr of H4350, all else the same. The velocities were 2789, 2778, and 2780, and the group measured 1.40" The temperature that day was 40 degrees F and there was a heavy mist in the air.

On January 24, 2001 I again went to the range and shot the 270 gr. Speer bullets. That day my loads were 82 gr. of H4350, all else the same. My first 3-shot group that day had velocities of 2791, 2802, and 2776, and the group measured 0.75" My second 3-shot group that day had velocities of 2802, 2813, and 2816, and the group measured 0.90" Actually, in that latter group, two shots were in the same hole, and the third was 0.90 inch away.

My best group with the 270 Speer bullet was shot on January 29, 2001. That day my loads were again with 83 gr. of H4350, and the velocities of my 3-shot group were 2811, 2811, and 2822. The group measured 0.47 inch. (All shooting mentioned here was at 100 yards.)

My Remington 700 Limited Classic 375 H&H rifle with which all this shooting was done, has a Leupold M8 4 power (fixed power) scope on it in Leupold QR mounts.

[This message has been edited by LE270 (edited 08-07-2001).]

 
Posts: 5883 | Location: People's Republic of Maryland | Registered: 11 March 2001Reply With Quote
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