How best to "keep it simple" when using the same .375 for plains game?
I use 300 grain Bullets for Buffalo and they by some magic or luck with my rifle are zero'd at 100 yards without touching the scope adjustment at all.
I have since tried this with several other 375HH Rifles and all are about the same. For some reason the 270's shoot just the right amount high at 100 yards to put them on the money at about 230-250 yards. While the 300 grainers will always hit around 95-110 yards for a Zero.
I have used Swift Aframes for the last 4 years almost exclusive in the above weights, and have no complaints. I have had 2 bullets pass through Buffalo on broadside shots and I have recovered one from the opposite side skin after going through the spine and one scapula. The bullet weighed 290 grians but has a big bone chunk imbedded in the front half of the lead.
There are probably other combinations that will work as good or better then this. I know this works for me and I have had clients use the same bullets and loads on Safari with me after asking advice on this. All have had excellent performance with no lost game. jj
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The happiest of people don't necessarily have the best of everything, they just make the best of everything they have.
Buffalo are expensive and paying for a second one that may not even be a trophy or even a bull could really ruin your day and bring down what would otherwise be a very special moment in your hunting career.
Softs can exit on some shots, Solids will almost always exit on broadside shots. jj
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The happiest of people don't necessarily have the best of everything, they just make the best of everything they have.
In the thick Jesse I would reccomend a Northfork, Swift, new Nosler or a Woodleigh in 300 gr. soft point for the paying hunter..or whatever his PH wants him to use...
I may use a solid myself because I don't like taking the rounds in and out of the gun all the time, but I can wait for the shot to present itself and if it does not I can live with that, so its not a stressing choice for me one way or the other, just whatever is in the gun at the time....but as everyone knows I tend to use solids most of the time, it has worked for me, so I see no reason to fix something that ain't broke.
I do believe the smaller the caliber the more dependable a solid becomes, for the most part.
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Ray Atkinson
I used a 300gr Swift A-Frame on my first Cape buffalo. Performance was perfect, even the bullet center-punched a three-inch sapling between us (I never saw it in the scope).
The bullet entered the below the shoulder, breaking the leg, and wrecking the heart.
The bull traveled 75yds., and died without bellowing.
I load a soft in the chamber, and fill the magazine with solids (just in case).
George
I would urge you to evaluate the 270 gr. GS Custom FN solid as one of your choices. GS Custom
The 300 gr. Barnes X in 375 is a good choice also, as evidenced by Saeed's 60-plus buffalo examples.
Don
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..Mac >>>===(x)===>