In a 375 H&H bolt action rifle, going after a buffalo you intend to shoot at less than 30 yards, which expanding bullets and which solids do you recommend, and how fast should they be moving (particularly the first up-close expanding bullet)?
H. C.
I only have experience with one buffalo but used Federal Premium 375 Trophy Bonded softs and had a one shot kill. Bullet retained 99% of its weight and expanded double.
BigB
George
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Shoot straight, shoot often, but by all means, use enough gun!
My PH said that my buffalo would have died pretty quickly from my first shot (300 grain Swift A-Frame) if I would have waited for just a bit. However, I did not go to Africa to save ammo, so I gave him a couple of solids for good measure.
The result was one dead 41" buffalo after 4 days of hard hunting in 100+ degree heat.
A solid is more important in a 375 than in a larger caliber....frontal and rear shots require a solid on Buffalo with the 375.
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Ray Atkinson
I think the only expanding bullet I might use on buffalo would be the TB Bear Claws, in addition to the one I have used many times, the Barnes X 300 grain.
I just do not trust the rest of them on buffalo.
In fact, I have stopped using solids since I used the X. It performs just as well.
On several occasions I have shot buffalo in the head, the bullets never had any problems penetrating through the brain and stopping in the neck.
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saeed@ emirates.net.ae
www.accuratereloading.com
By the way, i do have a question concerning solids and Softnosebullets on Buff.
Is it necessary to use a solid? Okay a solid will penetrate much more, but it destroyes much less than a softnose.It gives u just a hole.
Is a softnosebullet to soft for a frontal brain shot on 50m on a buff?
I heared that a lot PH tell there clients to use both. At first a solid and then the softnose. Nut wouldn�t the other way round, not the better choice. The first shot is on a standing buff, so u can take your time for aiming. And t he second shot -on the running buff- with a solid, because you have to shoot through the bush, where a solid would made a lot of sense.
Thanks for u answers
konstantin
[This message has been edited by Nickudu (edited 05-20-2002).]
Are any of the above choices especially bad for one reason or another?
Nosler Partition
Hornady 300 gr. RN SP Interlock (what I'm practicing with now, because they're cheap)
Win./Nosler CT Failsafe
Sierra 300 gr. Spitzer Boat Tail
Any sub-300 gr. bullets (I've heard of 250 gr. X-bullets being used. Any sense in this?)
Thanks,
H. C.
[This message has been edited by HenryC470 (edited 05-23-2002).]
I'll just use the solids and they always make two holes and they don't kill as fast or do as much damage as a soft....but they are absolute in that they always kill.
I have found the GS Solid to leave a longer bigger hole than a soft that makes the one big early terminal cavity then peters out to the off side hide.
Total destruction is more with the FN solid or cup point according to the bullet makers such as Northfork, GS Customs and Speer and I tend to agree on this where the big ungulates are concerned.
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Ray Atkinson