A few folks came over to ask what I was shooting (and why I was making so much noise). One guy was curious and kept asking about recoil and seemed real concerned about detached retinas. I explained that recoil was not bad. The gun is built with a Bastogne stock, a 24" L-W barrel, and weighs in at 10.8 LBS unloaded with scope.
Well, you would have thought that I had just said something questionable about his wife. He jerked back and repeated �10.8 LBS!, how can you possible hunt with a gun sooooo heavy.� One of his buddies quickly chimed in � well, I am sure you must have someone carry that for you while on Safari�. I explained that I have carried this gun by myself, during sweltering heat, for weeks on end throughout Zim and RSA without any ill effects.
Question - What is with all this craze to lighten guns? I have always built heavy guns and have never thought �Damn this gun is too heavy�. Does two pounds make such a big deal? On one hand you got a guy scared to death of recoil and the other, the same guy making a huge deal about weight? Have the laws of Physics suddenly changed and someone forgot to tell me? What is the big deal?
What weight is your big bore with scope and unloaded?
Neither seems too heavy, and recoil is just something we accept and move on.
This is a trend started by the rags; someone discovered lightweight rifles and everyone jumped on the bandwagon so they could get a free rifle from the gunmakers.
George
If you do travel with your gun in your hands all day, then certainly a 10+" gun would be gladly traded for something lighter. That said, since I owned a 458 lott that was sub 10#'s, I would not have a big bore gun that light again, ports or no. No sense in having a gun that isn't shootable, or sacrifices its shootability. I like to shoot my guns, and build them accordingly.
They must use a papier mache' stock to get it down to 8.5 lbs!
Don
470 Nitro weighs 10.75 lbs, 375 with scope 9.9. Even my 300 mag deer rifle was built heavy, a little over 9 lbs with scope. I experimented with a light weight 12 gauge for upland bird hunting and shoot better with a heavier gun with longer barrels. I do not understand the affliction with light guns other than the magazines promote them.
I do know the best shots in deer camp use heavy guns and the worst shots use lightweight models.
BigB
My M70 .375 H&H weighs just over 9# unloaded with iron sights. Shoots very comfortably with a 14.25" length of pull.
My .458 Ruger #1 weighs 9lbs, also iron sights, and is not a comfortable shooter for extended sessions. Much of this is due to a factory stock that is too short for me but the rifle should be heavier for my taste.
The 500 NE that I am having done will weigh 11.5 lbs. It will have the proper LOP and feature iron sights.
I am not a muscle bound youngster and I do not have any diffiuculty carrying my rifles over the Wyoming prairies or the forested mountains. My preference for iron sights keeps my shots at big game to a maximum of 200 yards and this sometimes necessitates additional footwork to get within the preferred range.
I enjoy shooting big bores at jackrabbits and prairie dogs for recreation and practice. If the rifle does not have the necessary weight or stock length, the fun goes away rather quickly.
Regards,
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~Holmes
"Those who appease a tiger do so in the hope that the tiger will eat them last." -Winston Churchill
Nothing wrong with a lightweight big bore at all if you enjoy shooting it and have confidence in the rifle.
I probably prefer a heavier rifle in a 458 than you do. Neither of us would be right or wrong, simply individuals with singular criteria.
My preferred barrel lengths are longer than is currently fashionable. So what? It's my rifle!
Regards,
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~Holmes
"Those who appease a tiger do so in the hope that the tiger will eat them last."
-Winston Churchill
As I recall he bemoaned the 7mm Rem when it came out, all the Weatherby's, and the big bores in general. Of course we never heard any of that again after he went to Africa with the 416.
Certain recoil pads, stock design, fit, and material all affect perceived recoil. I'm just getting too old to lug those beasts around, but I didn't like the weight of the M70 .375 way back when.
I'd rather suffer a little abuse at the range and be able to carry it.
But if you a strapping young boy or an oldy with the mass, you don't have to worry about weight and/or recoil.
For me the barrel heavyness of many Express style African rifles removes much of my ability to hold, point and shoot accurately, my own 9.3 looks like a conventional rifle, weighs 10.5lbs all up, is comfortable to hold and very easy to shoot.
The 458 lott Joel mentioned was light when I got it, and now lighter that Joel had a synthetic stock made. It also has a short barrel, and it ported. Despite everything seeming to be wrong, the slender short barrel, ports, and light weight, it was not objectionable to shoot, and I presume with a better stock, even more enjoyable.
That said, when I started on the 500 Jeffrey project, and got a ~25 1/2" blank, I asked the smith to leave the barrel that length, I haven't found long barrels to be objectionable, and figured the additional weight will help control recoil, minute increases in velocity won't hurt, and the overal aesthetics of the gun will be enhanced.
The 458 being built should come out with some heft as well, the barrel is a Ruger #1 take off, and will end up ~23" after a new threaded section is turned on it.
Asside from all that, I do plan to have a 50 alaskan lever gun built, with a ~18" barrel, and finished weight around 7#. It won't be loaded to anywhere near the levels of the 500 and 458, and I want something compact to throw in a boat, and tote on my back when fishing.
My .500 has this 23.25" barrel and when you pull it up quickly it feels as if all the weight is behind my left hand on the forestock. This is the only thing I do not like about my .500.
My .375 Weatherby (formerly a .375 H&H) on the ZKK-602 has a heavy barrel and as you know the slim stock. Consequently when I pull it up it is barrel heavy and points quite right at where my eye is looking. I love the way it feels.
If I could have another 2.5" on my Hannibal I believe it would be perfect. 2.5" doesn't sound like much but this is 0.925" at the muzzle, would add maybe a pound.
I guess it comes down to why one gets a big bore, and what one intends to do with it. I'm not a collector, I'm a shooter and hunter, and if I'm not shooting a gun, I sell it to get something I will, or think I will.
So, since I plan to shoot my big bores quite a bit, they have to be shootable. I can't stand muzzlebrakes, and so to make a big bore shootable, it has to have some mass to it. I have also found that I like the way a gun with some mass to it feels in my hands.
My first centerfire was a Ruger M77 MkII ultralight .308 ~7# scoped, and while it shoots well, and carries like a feather, I can't stand the way it feels. I think this is more an issue of balance, but, despite my affection for the gun, I was glad when my wife asked if she could have it, within the week, the stock was cut down to fit her, and for her, I think it is a fine gun. For me, the near 10# 35 whelen was right the first time I hefted it, and shooting it has just re-afirmed that.
What this post shows is that those of us who enjoy shooting big bores prefer some heft to them, because it makes them shootable.
Regards Arild
To simplify the weight suggestion, I will approximate Mitch's weights by subtracting 1.5 pounds for the scope and mounts and give a rough approximation of the recommended weights by bore size, unloaded and with express sights only [ +/- (1/2 pound) for the "naked" rifle]:
.585 cal.: 13 lbs.
.510 cal.: 11 lbs.
.458 cal.: 10 lbs.
.416 cal.: 9 lbs.
.375 cal.: 8 lbs.
Add 1.5 to 2 lbs. for a light scope, rings and mounts, and ammo to get it field ready. The sling is just a carry strap for the big bore, and is not considered here.
Of course this is not to stifle individual preferences and idiosyncracies. For example, my favorite 375 H&H is 7 lbs. naked,
but my currently active 416 Rigby bugholer is 10.75 lbs. when I strip it down. The above is just a prudent rule of thumb for rifle weights.
I will see y'all after I get back from Botswana, where I am taking the two exceptions to the rule, one too heavy and one too light. See ya later, gotta finish packing.
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Good huntin' and shootin',
RAB
[This message has been edited by R. A. Berry (edited 07-18-2001).]
If anyone has a 77 RSM 416 Rigby of recent manufactored lighter weight and wanting the heavier gun I would be willing to trade even. Providing the stock has some figure or contrast like mine.
Craftsman
9.5 to 10.5 Lbs. and 26" barrels is where I live. I like them heavier than that for shooting, but can't pack them all day...
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Ray Atkinson