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Shoot well, and hit hard.
Arild.
I don't have any dangerous game hunting experience, but my guess is that many hunters avoid the big .460 because it's a killer on both ends. Why abuse your shoulder and eardrums when a .458 Lott or .404 Jeff will accomplish the same results with far less recoil?
Another reason for its lack of following among the African hunters could be the fact that it requires a rigby size action and other than Weatherby no other manufacturer chambers for it. If you don't like the idea of push feeds for dangerous game hunting(and I don't) then only way to get a .460 in your rifle would be in a custom rifle, and in that case most people go for the .416 Rigby if an extra large action is used.
BB
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Ray Atkinson
For recoil wimps like myself it is too powerful to even contemplate.
I'm used to the recoil of a .375H&H, but this rifle was a much too light Harris Talon rifle and recoil was very stout. Three sighter shots from across the hood of a safari vehicle were all I could do. Also happened to shoot it prone (at a Thompson gazelle) and paid the price for that too.
It indeed tipped the broadside 'buff over with gusto. Hit the shoulder with a 500 grain Barnes X and his hooves were in the air. Plains game were easily taken out to 235 yards with very little meat damage.
In my area, (Michigan-USA), .460 brass/ammo is surprisingly easy to find. My overall opinion is that the cartridge is everything it is hyped up to be, but very few people are capable of properly handling it.
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"shoot 'em if you got 'em!"
I'm 5'9" and 170 and the recoil from a 460 Weatherby while standing up is nothing but a big hard shove (prone would be a different matter). A .340 Weatherby, on the otherhand, gives me whiplash, it's recoil is so sharp. It's easier on you and me 'cause we give with it. Big guys don't give as easy and they absorb more recoil. I've always thought it funny that after a great big guy shoots a hard kicker and declares it brutal, I'd shoot it and just smile.
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Say what you mean, and mean what you say.
What is the conclusion of getting a detached retina like John Wootters got? I am concerned.
I have had two clients (both Americans, but please, I do not intend to insult anybody...)
with 460 Weatherbys and both was a disaster.
The first one shot a warthog, then throw the rifle on the ground saying "you can have it for free". It is still there as far as I know.
The other case was a client (he is dead now otherwise I would not tell you the story) who was hunting buffalo two years before and used a 375. He did not want me to back him, the buff was gutshot and disappared and was never found. He blamed the caliber of course and the next time he arrived he was equipped with a 460 Weatherby.
We ran into three dagha boys (sorry Alf for the spelling but I have always been spelling dagha like this)which was running in a line. Distance around 70 yards. I told him to take the last one because he had the best horns.
The client shot off the FIRST buffalos front leg. Needless to say, it was also lost.
Shot placement gentlemen! Do not bother with super rifles,leave them in your gunsafe when you go hunting. Learn to shoot a medium caliber well and you will NEVER have any problems if you place the first bullet right.
Bjorn
You are exactly correct.With a smaller person,the recoil just kind of pushes them around.On the other hand,take a guy my size (6'2 and 275 lbs.)or bigger,and he'll absorb most of the recoil.It hurts I tell ya!This is why my 458 from the bench wants to put me in a full body cast.Off hand it's not too bad though.
Bjorn,
You were dealing with clients who couldn't handel the heavy recoil and were scarred to death of the guns.You must agree that if the could handel them properly,that a hunter could use a 460 extremely effectively.
My father had a 460 way back when,when they still had the el-crapo Pendelton brake (all of 5% reduction!).He was not affraid of the rifle,and from the bench in front of witnesses he put both 500s at 2700 FPS and later 350s at 3000 FPS into literaly one ragged hole groups at 100 yards.He killed one deer with it using the 350s.I won't say what happend,but just think of what a bullet that big that was fairly fragile did at an impact velocity of around 2900 FPS or so.
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"Only accurate rifles are interesting"
Another thing that comes to mind is just because you can stand on your hind legs and shoot it at the target range does not mean that you can bend over double and poke it out in front of you under the bush and crack of a shot without eating part of it, or squating and shooting without rolling over backasswards...I cannot and I have shot as many big bores as anyone..I can shoot the 416 or 404 in thoes awkard positions..It would be wise to take that into consideration, but its a personal thing so have at what blows your skirt up....
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Ray Atkinson
Ray,
I'd like to see someone try that with a .460.
Just let me know when they try it, I'll have the video camera ready.
Rolling through the jess with a Weatherby.
Yeeee Haaaaaw!
That'd be funnier than Saeeds "The Doctor and the .460!
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Say what you mean, and mean what you say.
[This message has been edited by Ol' Sarge (edited 11-22-2001).]
Sarge
I know some people can handle and shoot a .460 Weatherby niceley!
The problems are those who can not. See Rays post above.
American clients are usually very good shots!
Bjorn
The 460 Wby. in a CRF rifle, such as my BBK-02, is as good a killer as anyone could ask for...WITH THE PROPER LOAD FIRED BY SOMEONE WHO IS NOT AFRAID OF IT!
I stick to 115 grains of IMR 4350 because it gives 1/2 MOA 3-shot groups and a velocity of 2500 fps with 500 grain bullets, in my rifle.
You must use a premium bullet or all is for naught. GSC FN/HV, Barnes-X, Speer AGS, Swift A-Frame...these are a few appropriate bullets that come to mind.
If you are good with it and load it right, the 460 Wby. will not fail you. I am sure of that.
RAB
If I needed more power than my 416 Rem. I would not go to a blown out version like the Wby or whatever, I'd go to a bigger bore like the 458 Lott. or even a properly handloaded 458 Win.
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Ray Atkinson
Alf,
With the 460 Weatherby, I shot a water buffalo on the run at 50 yards, striking it in the chest and raking back into the gut, tearing up lungs and paunch. This made the buff stop and stand still with its head down, bleeding from the mouth and nose. I finished it with a neck shot at 25 yards.
This was a rogue animal that had killed all the sheep on the farm here in Kentucky and needed to be put down. The first shot with the 460 Wby did not exit.
I like a rifle I can depend on for complete penetration. LOAD A SOFTER, LIGHTER, OR SLOWER BULLET IF COMPLETE PENETRATION IS NOT DESIRED. This is easily done.
Ray and Alf,
And recoil is not even worse with the bigger bore than the appropriately loaded 460 Weatherby? NO WAY! Ask Mitch about the T.rex. That is the only gun that has given me a headache.
The 458 Lott ballistics can be easily duplicated by the 460 Wby at truly low pressure when the Lott is maxed out and straining the chamber and case to make it.
I sense some begrudging acceptance of the validity of the 460 Weatherby as a killer that is as good as it needs to be for any situation.
Those that can't make it work are probably using the too hot factory ammo with too soft bullets. If not that, then they just can't shoot.
Or, are they nostalgia freaks hung up on sans-belt romanticism and magic low velocity numbers and fragile bullets, or "bore envy"?
As Gerard would say, there is a new set of rules, with all the great bullets available today.
The 460 Weatherby is really as good as it gets. END OF STORY.
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Rifles And Bullets r us: RAB
[This message has been edited by R. A. Berry (edited 11-23-2001).]
Like Ray it isn't my cup of tea, but should do just about anything you want it to, if you can shoot it!
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..Mac >>>===(x)===>
also DUGABOY1
DUGABOY DESIGNS
Collector/trader of fine double rifles, and African wildlife art
At the butt end of the rifle it is called WHUMP.
Ray gets these mixed up sometimes.
For every WHOMP there is an equal and opposite WHUMP.
Anyone with minimal fitness can train himself to tolerate 460 Wby WHUMP.
First there must be the desire. As previously stated, recoil tolerance is largely due to psychology.
Shooting technique is the second most important factor, and it depends to a large extent on psychology also.
Anthropomorphics of big guy versus little guy, fitness, endurance and strength are of lesser importance.
A fit little guy may have the edge.
A big guy with a bad attitude is the wimp in WHUMP tolerance.
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Rifles And Bullets r us: RAB
People complaining about the classic bullet problems of the 460 these days is so cliche when you consider in the same sentence they are extolling the virtues of bullets like gerard's Fn solid which doesn't care if you push it an extra 250fps.
karl.
I used to be a skinny 160 pound marathon runner in my prime. Now I am a 214 pound fatso, longing to see 180 again. Hey, I put on 54 pounds and you only gained 40? Hopefully mine is not all fat. Age and gravity have also splayed my feet out from 10-1/2 B to 12 E (U.S.). Can't get into my old track spikes anymore. 9:25 was my best two mile time.
Boxing and distance "racing" do have a lot in common besides the roadwork a boxer does. They both involve mental toughness and endurance of pain. Boxing definitely more so than marathoning. Anyway, either type athlete should have a psychological advantage in recoil tolerance.
Hey, I bet that is why you are so good at it even though you are a big guy.
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Rifles And Bullets r us: RAB
For a given WHOMP the WHUMP can be reduced by using a muzzle brake. However the brake introduces another kill factor called WHIMP. This is the factor that kills your hearing and sociability whether hunting or at the range.
So, for every WHOMP there is an equal and Opposite WHUMP + WHIMP.
Ideally, when hunting, the WHIMP factor should be reduced to zero, especially if accompanied by a PH, or if anyone else nearby is subjected to your muzzle blast.
I thought I had a good seated position (I was at the range and yes it was packed) settled in exhaled BANG. I just kind of kept going and going and...
I did keep the muzzle pointed downrange but both of my feet were straight up in the air.
I acted as if I did that sort of thing every day but it didn't help my embarrassment. I quietly packed and left.
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Ray Atkinson
Hey Roger,
Seems like I've seen stop-action photographs of Ross Seyfried doing the same maneuver.
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RAB
On the big stuff I don't consider myself to be anywhere near Mitch's calibre(sorry pun).
But you'd give anyone a run for their money shooting the 585's.
So yeah you just stick to the 50cals and don't muscle in on our territory
Karl.