07 July 2002, 00:30
<Per577>.416 Wby & .460 Wby recoil
I have a custom .416 wby weighing 5,2 kilograms with a laminated stock, and i was wondering if the recoil of a .460 Wby is a lot harder with full powerloads than the .416 Wby at it's max(410 gr.at 2750 fps) and the 500 gr. at 2630 fps ???
![[Confused]](images/icons/confused.gif)
07 July 2002, 01:23
BER007Per577,
energy in the same rifle
.416 WBY 6004 ft. lbs
.460 WBY 7389 ft. lbs
Your shoulder will see the difference
07 July 2002, 06:57
500grains460 weatherby with 500 grains at 2600 fps develops 110 ft lbs of recoil.
The 416 pushing 400 grains at 2800 fps develops 95 ft lbs of recoil.
A recoil calculator is here:
http://huntamerica.com/recoil_calculator/07 July 2002, 10:47
pertinaxSo the answer is "somewhat worse". Not dramatically, I'd say. But noticable.
Pertinax
Per577,
I imagine it would be like the difference between the .375 with 300 grainers and the .416 with 400 grainers.
07 July 2002, 16:37
Brian MWhen both have a good muzzel brake,like the KDF or Weatherby's rip off of the KDF called the Accubrake,they'd have the same recoil as a 338 Winchester Magnum and a 375 H&H,respectively.
09 July 2002, 12:44
RobgunbuilderThe 460 Wby will kick marginally harder, but not so much that you would notice.-Rob
09 July 2002, 13:15
<Mitch>The 460 wby. kicks much harder than the 416 wby. if you fire them both without a muzzle brake. If both have muzzle brakes the difference in recoil is not as dramatic. But the 460 will still have a good deal more recoil. For the record the 378 wby. kicks less than either of the bigger calibers. I have all three of these rifles and I have fired them without a muzzle brake and with a brake.
[ 07-09-2002, 04:19: Message edited by: Mitch ]