SRvet
AH enthusiast
Have a look at this video I have just seen. I would be interested in your thoughts …., a reasonable course of action or foolhardy in the extreme??
I have killed two cape buffalo bulls. Both with a .458 Win Mag. I have no experience with the .45-70, so I'm hardly an expert. The first one was with old Winchester factory ammo. The first shit was through the shoulder and low through the heart. He stayed alive for several more shots until I finally broke his neck when he was about ten feet from the PH when the PH's rifle malfunctioned. The next one was taken with full power .509 grain hand loads. The bullet on that one also struck on the shoulder and hit the heart a couple of inches higher. That bull ran about 25 yards and piled up dead.It’s been done many times before including by some AH members, so nothing groundbreaking IMO. With the correct bullet and shot placement it has worked on Cape buffalo. It wouldn’t be my first choice, IMO I still think it’s marginal and would much prefer to use a 375 H&H as a minimum.
The guy in the video says he’s getting almost 1900 FPS with an 450 grain Hornady Interlock bullet? Did not know they made an 450 grain Hornady Interlock bullet for 45-70? If that is correct, that’s a hot load. Interesting link below regarding 45-70 and Cape buffalo.
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Read This Before Hunting Cape Buffalo With The 45-70 Government
Modern 45-70 ammunition is much more powerful than the original black powder load, but is hunting Cape Buffalo with the 45-70 Government a good idea?thebiggamehuntingblog.com
Hunters who can shoot vs Target shooters who go killing. The 223 for everything debate may be the dumbest idea I’ve ever heard propped up by target shooters.It's amazing the difference in people's opinions.
On this website, most of the posters seem to share my opinion that its best to err on the side of being over-gunned rather than under-gunned.
On another hunting website, (and this site censors their name) a lot of the members promote using a .223 for everything including bears, moose, elk, etc.
That being said, if you look at a ballistics chart, you'll see the relatively wide and heavy 45-70 loses velocity and thus power fairly quickly, so while a +P loading out of a long barrel might get close to 4,000 FPE at the muzzle, it drops off much more rapidly than something like a .375 would.
That was my concern!!Hornady doesn't make a 450 gr Interlock in .458. They make a 350 gr that you might could get 57 gr of Varget under and would probably get around 1900 fps.
I agree entirely that if I were to attempt to shoot a buffalo with a 45/70 (which I will not!) that I would use a bullet like the 325g CEB solid. I wouldn’t be using an interlock of any description as they shed their cores for fun!I'm one of those that has (used a .45-70 on buffalo). Two hunts, two buffalo. I have no knowledge of this factory load. After consultation with my PH, I went with a solid (Cutting Edge 325 grain brass solids). I was told the range would be 75 or less, and my load development and practice reflected that. Both were shot at approximately 40ish yards and both were dead very, very fast from a single shot. I was getting a hair over 1800 fps from my Marlin GBL (18.5" barrel). I would absolutely use this on buffalo again, and very likely will.
They do not show a load on their website with a 450 grain bullet.
By the way, in my opinion, that's an ugly .45-70...![]()
I knew the son of a man that used a .22 Hornet yo kill elk. He sat in a blind that overlooked a water hole. When the elk looked toward him, he shot through the eye to the brain. Worked every time. Worked every time, but that does not make a .22 Hornet a good elk rifle. Same logic applies to using a .45-70 on a buffalo hunt.I'm one of those that has (used a .45-70 on buffalo). Two hunts, two buffalo. I have no knowledge of this factory load. After consultation with my PH, I went with a solid (Cutting Edge 325 grain brass solids). I was told the range would be 75 or less, and my load development and practice reflected that. Both were shot at approximately 40ish yards and both were dead very, very fast from a single shot. I was getting a hair over 1800 fps from my Marlin GBL (18.5" barrel). I would absolutely use this on buffalo again, and very likely will.
They do not show a load on their website with a 450 grain bullet.
By the way, in my opinion, that's an ugly .45-70...![]()
I load that bullet in my Marlin 1895 Cowboy .45-70 with 26" octagon barrel. I get about 1850 ft/s with it. Completely devastated a white tail deer with it. But even that load is so hot it will sometimes kick the lever open, so it's probably too hot.That was my concern!!
I knew the son of a man that used a .22 Hornet yo kill elk. He sat in a blind that overlooked a water hole. When the elk looked toward him, he shot through the eye to the brain. Worked every time. Worked every time, but that does not make a .22 Hornet a good elk rifle. Same logic applies to using a .45-70 on a buffalo hunt.
I was not saying that using a .45-70 on a buffalo is the same as using a .22 Hornet to hunt elk. It was not intended as a direct analogy. My point was that just because something has been, or can be, done does not make it the best option.Agree to disagree sir. And your analogy is quite lacking, IMO.
YA HOO! Ride 'em cowboy!Have a look at this video I have just seen. I would be interested in your thoughts …., a reasonable course of action or foolhardy in the extreme??
Even that analogy has flaws. Why use a 375 HH when you could use a 458 Win or Lott, why use any of them when you can go bigger?I was not saying that using a .45-70 on a buffalo is the same as using a .22 Hornet to hunt elk. It was not intended as a direct analogy. My point was that just because something has been, or can be, done does not make it the best option.