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Even if it becomes a solitary source, Hornady .375R brass is good enough. Ran my first batch to death early on, got to 16 firings before incipient separations showed up. Primer pockets were still snug though, trimmed about every third firing. No loss of neck tension, no splits. So now have a lifetime supply, in case the naysayers turn out to be correct. Won't matter to me. Cuz also put in a lifetime supply of bullets. | |||
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One of Us |
I think braass wil always be there as I reckon a lot of blokes would have it as a 338/375 wildcat. I assume 416 Ruger brass is made is made and that would be a super simple neck down. There are plenty of them in Australia but they have mainly been bought at the expense of the 338, not the 375 H&H. | |||
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One of Us |
Part of a cartridges success is measured by how many different factory ammo offerings are available. The 375 Ruger isnt a game changer and has a long way to go before it is as successful as the H&H. | |||
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One of Us |
There is a shop near St Louis that has some from time to time. I’ve also bought direct from DoubleTap All We Know Is All We Are | |||
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One of Us |
I wonder how many years Western-Winchester was the single or most common source of 375 HH ammo. | |||
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One of Us |
I don't know but I don't think that is valid as support for the comparison to the H&H. | |||
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One of Us |
I do. I see it as one and the same. I suspect that for a long time the only readily available ammo for the 375 HH was Western-Winchester. It made it just fine. The 375 Ruger through Hornady will survive the same. Remington is not going to load 375 Ruger too niche. They are out of the Safari Game. Olin will never through a Hornady naked cartridge to its line. So what. Hornady ain’t going away. Most in this small market reload Hornady and Nosler/Norma will make brass. The bullets are the same. Superior, or someone like them, and Quality Cartridge will always be there. If they are not then everything but 7.62 ball, 5.56, and 7.62x47 is all that will be around. | |||
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One of Us |
I don't think anyone, myself included, has suggested the 375 Ruger will die. | |||
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One of Us |
I do not think you have. My point is the Ruger is less than 20 years old. The 375 HH was first loaded in the USA in 1932. We won’t live long enough to see it catch up. The head start is too big. There is a lot of ammo out there. Dies sold/rifles sold over that not yet 20 years compared to the other may tell better which is currently more popular than how many folks load ammo. | |||
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One of Us |
I think 375 H&H will remain number one by a big margin. Most big bores are bought by big bore enthusiasts and the 375 H&H just has that thing about it. Most big shooting is kangaroos, pigs, goats, deer, rocks, trees, tins of water of etc. However, I think a far higher percentage of 375 Ruger sales are to blokes who buy them with specific big game to shoot. | |||
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