.270win and lead free ammunition

The .270 is NOT marginal for plains game! It’s a sensible minimum for most plains game. Excluding Eland, it will cleanly take anything you’d like to hunt in that category.
 
Can’t speak for lead-free, but with the old Winchester Super X 150Gr Power Point factory load… my daughter has successfully used the .270 Winchester to take all of her plains game to date (mostly with one shot kills):
Kudu
Wildebeest
Zebra
Impala
Reedbuck
Bushbuck
Springbok
Sable
Warthog
Bush pig

Only one warthog required a second shot.

Initial shot placement is extremely critical when employing this caliber against the larger African antelope, but (barring eland) you will not have a problem if you shoot straight.
 
I don’t know about marginal, it’s pretty good with 130gr barns TSX and Norma oryx 150gr on nilgai and aoudad
My buddies wife just killed a huge old aoudad with 140gr TSX, went in last rib , through the heart and lungs, neck ,and stopped under the eye
She killed her zebra with same gun @ 200 yards

My friend Mr blocker killed everything in Africa except DG , with a 257 weatherby with 120gr nosler partition
 
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Sent my nephew last summer to South Africa with handloads using the 129 gr barnes LRX. Sable, kudu and on down the list without any issues.

That is a perfect bullet for hunting plains game in that caliber.
 
I've read that the .270win is a marginal calibre for larger plains game. Has the development of lead free ammunition made it a more viable option?
@Slim01 - were You reading old articles written by “Elmer Keith” ? If you can shoot a .270 win Accurately and use well constructed bullets…why would there be any problems?
 
A Winchester M70 Classic Stainless in .270 Win has been my go to African plaines game rifle for three African safaris, soon to be four. I’ve also carried a 458 Lott for DG and have used a camp rifle in .300 WM. I shoot my .270 well and have confidence with it. I’ve used 150 gr. Barnes TSX loaded by Safari Arms. (FYI- Safari Arms now recommends 1:9.5 twist rate or greater for the 150 gr. TSX. I have a factory 1:10.)

Zebra, sable, waterbuck, Nyala, gemsbok, hartebeest and smaller type plaines game.
 
I do think that the Barnes x has elevated the effectiveness of many rifles. When they first came out I had a friend loading them up for his 257 wby. He was amazed by the results on game. Bullets holding together at those speeds are devastating on game animals. I have also been impressed with the accuracy that I have been able to get with relative ease.
 
I think the 270 remains what it is. A good deer cartridge. I’d use it up to Kudu if I ever took mine to Africa but I think better options for a traveling hunter.
When I lived in Montana in the 70s and 80s I got my first elk with a 243. I moved up to a 270 Win because of grizzlies. I guided in the Bob with it and never felt undergunned for elk or grizzlies.
 
With a .270, I have taken up to a Roan, which is the heaviest antelope second to Eland.
 
I've read that the .270win is a marginal calibre for larger plains game. Has the development of lead free ammunition made it a more viable option?
I do not think that lead free ammunition has made any cartridge more lethal.
 

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