Why not see if the 24" barrels works for you first. If it doesn't, you could cut it back an inch at a time until you reach the balance of controllability and handling you are looking for. Then crown the barrel.
George
------------------
Shoot straight, shoot often, but by all means, use enough gun!
I personally like all my rifles to have a 26" barrel as they just "hang" better offhand.
I have never had any trouble with brush hanging up on a long barrel, that brush can be anywhere between 2" to 26" from your barrel, face or ???. so that carbine argument never carried much weight with me, the early pioneers, or old ivory hunters who like the long tubes.....
------------------
Ray Atkinson
Don
If you start with a 26" barrel in a .416 Rem Mag and test it with 10 different powders to find out which one gives the highest velocity and then cut the barrel off 2" inches at a time and re-chronograph each time down to, let's say 20", the exact same powder that gave the highest velocity at the longer length will continue to give the highest velocity at the shorter length.
The relative differential between powders may change as the barrel is shortened, but the powder that provides the highest velocity will not change!
Muzzle flash is another matter but the question was about power.
A light, short barreled big bore is not a whole lot of fun to shoot. Accordingly, most folks simply don�t shoot them well. There was a myth that developed many years ago that an African DGR had to have a shorter pull stock and a short barrel. The shorten stock was believed to shoulder quicker and the shorter barrel was believed to be easier to navigate through the bush.
Both ideas have proven to be quite wrong. You want weight and balance. Most folks, who understand the concept, want a barrel length no shorter than 24" and many like Ray want a 26" barrel. In a .416, I would suggest total unloaded weight to be in the 9 - 10 lbs range. You can carry it all day and it absorbs many times its weight in recoil.
Suggestion - Shoot the gun a bunch before you decide to do anything. Then, if you still want to cut the barrel, go out and shoot the gun some more. Do this repeatedly until you decide that you don�t need to cut the barrel.
(I have a similar suggestion for NOT using a muzzle break that is equally effective.)
This is even with malaqi-aaq on your head.
Todd E
My answer had to do with what was shootable out of a short barrel, possibly in low light and possibly needing a quick follow up shot.
Use a fast burning powder to reduce muzzle blast and flash. Sure you lose another 100 fps over a slow powder, but you are not blinded for two minutes after the first shot in twilight.
If you wanted max power you'd never cut the barrel in the first place.
Don