375 H&H

PENDLETON AMMUNITION

Sponsor
Since 2025
AH senior member
Joined
Feb 24, 2025
Messages
70
Reaction score
191
Website
pendletonammunition.com
Deals & offers
2
Steve Wisneski used our .375 H&H - 300 Gr Swift A-Frames load on his trip to Africa to down Two of the Big 5 - our load exceeds 2600 FPS in most rifles and generates an incredible amount of energy. It's not out performing a .500 Jeffrey but it sure looks to get the job done!

Full Mane Lion.jpg
Cape Buffalo.jpg
 
Last edited by a moderator:
Nice animals and excellent ammunition.

HH
 
Those are some serious numbers with a 300gr bullet. Very impressive.
 
Great caliber, great bullet. Congratulations on the lion and buffalo!
 
We just finished up load development for a new solid offering today.
Starting now we have the 300 Gr Cutting Edge Safari Solid... 2710 FPS out of a Remington Model 700 and 2679 FPS out of a Christensen Arms Ridgeline. Both well inside MOA accurate.

For those who need a solid for their .375 H&H this will be a good option.
 
I have read and listened to podcasts about sectional density and using heavy for caliber bullets. I know 300 grains is the most loaded weight for a .375 H&H (and fully understand some folks don't find it necessary or finding a problem that isn't) but i am fairly interested in trying 350 grain bullets in it. I know Doctari talks about his disappointment in the 350 grain barnes not being "cut" right to mushroom wider bersus the 300 grain.

I hear wonders of woodleigh cupped solids and hydro bullets. So what 350 grain bullets do you all like for buffalo in .375?
 
I have read and listened to podcasts about sectional density and using heavy for caliber bullets. I know 300 grains is the most loaded weight for a .375 H&H (and fully understand some folks don't find it necessary or finding a problem that isn't) but i am fairly interested in trying 350 grain bullets in it. I know Doctari talks about his disappointment in the 350 grain barnes not being "cut" right to mushroom wider bersus the 300 grain.

I hear wonders of woodleigh cupped solids and hydro bullets. So what 350 grain bullets do you all like for buffalo in .375?
IF I was going to use a 350 gr in 375 H&H it would be a north fork SS. You still get a tough bonded bullet and a solid base. It’s the only well constructed lead core 350 gr bullet in 375 I’m aware of. Woodleigh is very soft.
 
Ive witnessed 2 375 tsx’s pass completely through a cape buff’s shoulders and my used 300 gr woodleigh hs solids pass all through a very large giraffe’s shoulder. I dont feel the need for larger bullets. That was just 2 days of the last hunt we were on.
 
IF I was going to use a 350 gr in 375 H&H it would be a north fork SS. You still get a tough bonded bullet and a solid base. It’s the only well constructed lead core 350 gr bullet in 375 I’m aware of. Woodleigh is very soft.

Have you ever used a 350g bullet in 375HH? Genuinely asking. Seems like the performance of the 300g is perfect. Curious to see if there is any advantage to a 50g more.
 
I have read and listened to podcasts about sectional density and using heavy for caliber bullets. I know 300 grains is the most loaded weight for a .375 H&H (and fully understand some folks don't find it necessary or finding a problem that isn't) but i am fairly interested in trying 350 grain bullets in it. I know Doctari talks about his disappointment in the 350 grain barnes not being "cut" right to mushroom wider bersus the 300 grain.

I hear wonders of woodleigh cupped solids and hydro bullets. So what 350 grain bullets do you all like for buffalo in .375?
We won't load the 350 Gr... it will under perform and we are just not in the business of under performance. The 300 Gr Swift A-Frame combined with our load produces a tremendous amount of energy... the 350 Gr softs will not come close to matching that performance.
 
And THIS is the information I was looking for! Super helpful Steve. 300 grain bullets it is. Or I step up to a .416 of some kind. Thank you.
 
We won't load the 350 Gr... it will under perform and we are just not in the business of under performance. The 300 Gr Swift A-Frame combined with our load produces a tremendous amount of energy... the 350 Gr softs will not come close to matching that performance.

If you had to guess, and I know this varies, 2600 fps is the average muzzle velocity you're getting with a 300gr bullet and your load formula?
 
Have you ever used a 350g bullet in 375HH? Genuinely asking. Seems like the performance of the 300g is perfect. Curious to see if there is any advantage to a 50g more.
I have no interest in using a 350 gr bullet. The 300 gr bullet does everything a 375 needs and is more versatile for longer shots. Also better bullet options. You can listen to Kevin Robertson’s podcast on bullets on the Big Game Hunting podcast. It’s a great discussion and he has his reasons for thinking a 350 gr is superior on buffalo, but I see no reason to change from 300 gr swift A frames.
 
I have no interest in using a 350 gr bullet. The 300 gr bullet does everything a 375 needs and is more versatile for longer shots. Also better bullet options. You can listen to Kevin Robertson’s podcast on bullets on the Big Game Hunting podcast. It’s a great discussion and he has his reasons for thinking a 350 gr is superior on buffalo, but I see no reason to change from 300 gr swift A frames.

I'm almost finished with podcast. Interesting listen. Makes sense what he says. I don't know if I'd shoot my first buff with a 350gr but he makes a great point.

I think a lot of it comes down to the bullet technology being so good and consistently manufactured these days.

From what I gathered, it seems like he doesn't like anything much faster than 2150-2300 fps and nothing much slower.
 

Forum statistics

Threads
61,468
Messages
1,345,666
Members
115,773
Latest member
Vhaygoldla
 

 

 

Latest profile posts

buckstix wrote on teklanika_ray's profile.
HERE IS WHAT I AM SENDING TO YOU TOMORROW - SEE TRACKING


SOME OF THESE ARE NEVER FOUND FOR SALE "ANYWHERE" BECAUSE THEY ARE SO RARE :)
15-RARE-CARTRIDGES.jpg
Hunted:
USA:
AK, CO, IA, KS, MN, MO, MT, NE, NM, SD, UT, WI, WY
Canada: Manitoba, Saskatchewan
International: Scotland, Limpopo South Africa
 
Top