May God/Allah grant him an eternity in heaven/Jannatul Ferdous.
Colonel Art Alphin was absolutely revolutionary in the development of sporting firearms & ammunition.
His company A Square did so much for the sportsman of the 1980s & 1990s. He designed the Hannibal rifle on the Enfield Model 1917 action. And also many interesting cartridges such as the .460 A Square Short, .495 A Square, .500 A Square and .577 Tyrannosaur.
He designed the first monolithic solid bullets for sporting rifle use out of naval bronze (by using the French 8mm Lebel “Ball D” service cartridge as inspiration).
He was the first gun writer to really do extensive research into why .458 Winchester Magnum ammunition was performing erratically. For this, he collaborated with the Department Of National Parks in Zimbabwe… who had sanctioned the elephant & Cape buffalo culling programs at the time (and their parks staff were experiencing serious reliability issues with .458 Winchester Magnum ammunition in the field).
He provided two batches of .458 Winchester Magnum ammunition to the National Parks for their use. The first batch was a prototype in 1987, using 500Gr Hornady round nosed steel jacketed FMJ solids and Remington brass. The second batch was in 1991; A Square commercial factory loads using 465Gr round nosed monolithic naval bronze solids.
He helped PAC (Problem Animal Control) Officer Mike LaGrange trial several of his proprietary calibers & rifles out in the field in the 1980s on elephant & Cape buffalo.
The .500 A Square in particular, is a favorite cartridge of mine.
Rest in peace, Colonel. We will never forget your immense contributions to our field.