The Accurate Reloading Forums
50 Alaskan Recoil
12 July 2006, 12:31
Aglifter50 Alaskan Recoil
I have a Marlin 1895 CB in 45-70, that I'm ending up shooting plenty of 540 gr. Garrets out of -- not much fun. Would a 50 Alaskan give me more/similar power w. less recoil? (Thinking it might since it's a lower pressure cartridge.)
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12 July 2006, 21:33
conchoMy openion The .50 will hurt ! Why don't you lower your bullet weight in your 45/70.
13 July 2006, 12:14
The MetalsmithTry switching to maybe a 500 grain hard cast load instead. The .50 Alaskan is gonna hurt pretty good. This would be easier if you cast your own.
"Molotov Cocktails don't leave fingerprints"
-Dr. Ski
13 July 2006, 18:55
scr83jpCheck out
http://www.castperformance.com you can buy their bullets from Midway.
17 July 2006, 03:44
buckeyeshooterMy 50 alaskan is a converted 1895 cowboy. However, The barrel is a heavier design as the sight dovetails in the factory 45/70 would not allow a safe rebore. So, with the rebarrelling the total gun weight is now 12 1/2 pounds with the heavy 26" octogon. That with the addition of a decellerator recoil pad actually yields a rifle that kicks less than my 1895 in 45/70. I use 405's at 2000fps max loads in the 45/70 and feel less recoil with the 50 alsakan shooting 535 woodleighs at 1850fps in the heavier rifle with the recoil pad. Hope this helps.
17 July 2006, 09:03
AglifterExactly the kind of info I wanted, what type of recoil pad? I currently have a Pachmeyer on mine, and I've been thinking about switching to a limbsaver.
And for the support of this Declaration, with a firm reliance on the protection of divine Providence, we mutually pledge to each other our Lives, our Fortunes and our sacred Honor.
17 July 2006, 19:55
El Deguelloquote:
Originally posted by Aglifter:
I have a Marlin 1895 CB in 45-70, that I'm ending up shooting plenty of 540 gr. Garrets out of -- not much fun. Would a 50 Alaskan give me more/similar power w. less recoil? (Thinking it might since it's a lower pressure cartridge.)
This will depend on gun weight, bullet weight, MV, and weight of the powder charge. If all of these factors are about the same, recoil will be comparable also, regardless of the diameter of the bullets......
"Bitte, trinks du nicht das Wasser. Dahin haben die Kuhen gesheissen."
17 July 2006, 19:57
El Deguelloquote:
Exactly the kind of info I wanted, what type of recoil pad? I currently have a Pachmeyer on mine, and I've been thinking about switching to a limbsaver.
Well,
if you make the gun five pounds heavier by putting a massive barrel on it, naturally it will kick less, even if you keep shooting the same load! The fact that this guy's rifle is now a .50 Alaskan doesn't enter into the equation here at all!
"Bitte, trinks du nicht das Wasser. Dahin haben die Kuhen gesheissen."
18 July 2006, 05:14
buckeyeshooterThe pad is a Pachmeyer Decellerator.
El D is also correct. One of the reasons I chose the heavy barrel is that I wanted the gun to be a light kicker. As far as the weight goes, everything I carry in the field is over 10 pounds-- I carry a 12 pounder like most guys carry a 6 pounder-- I am used to it.
19 July 2006, 04:09
3584ELKquote:
Originally posted by buckeyeshooter:
The pad is a Pachmeyer Decellerator.
El D is also correct. One of the reasons I chose the heavy barrel is that I wanted the gun to be a light kicker. As far as the weight goes, everything I carry in the field is over 10 pounds-- I carry a 12 pounder like most guys carry a 6 pounder-- I am used to it.
But you don't have 11,000 foot mountains to climb!
Merkel 140A- .470NE
Beretta Vittoria- 12 Ga.
J.P. Sauer & Sohn Type B- 9.3x64mm
ArmaLite AR-10A4- 7.62x51mm
Franchi Highlander- 12 Ga.
Marlin 1894 CB Limited- .41 Magnum
Remington 722- .244 Rem.
and many, many more.
An honest man learns to keep his horse saddled.
19 July 2006, 19:38
buckeyeshooterI hunted Idaho with it last year. But generally, you are correct.