The .416 cartridge is superior in every respect, but it kicks like a beast in anything but a fairly heavy rifle. The 9.3 on tbe other hand, has accounted for 1000s of buffsloes and recoil is significantly less in rifles of equal weights . That said , most 9.3s are quite light , so felt recoil with a full power load may be as severe as with a .416 in a magnum weight rifle.Between the two calibres which you have mentioned , l would personally opt for the 9.3 millimeter mauser in your case , because as you say , you cannot handle the 400 grain bullets in your .416 Remington magnum.
Speaking from personal experience , many of my continental clients used to use a 9.3 millimeter mauser bolt operation rifle to secure Gaurs . A good 286 grain soft nose bullet fired from the side , which pierced both the lungs of a Gaur and opened up nicely inside them , would guarantee a dead Gaur. A beast hit in such a manner would go eighty to ninety yards , blowing blood from it's nose and mouth , before dropping dead .
Now , a 9.3 millimeter mauser cartridge was rather a little bit on the light side to stop a charging Gaur above 1800 pounds . However , you are a client and you do not need to worry about stopping charges . Instead , you should focus on placing your first bullet in a vital region . If you can do that with a 9.3 millimeter mauser , then l can guarantee a successfully secured buffalo .
I think that you will be fine with a 9.3 millimeter mauser . It is better to shoot properly with a comparitively smaller bore , than to use a larger bore which you have trouble using comfortably .
I agree with you.I do love the 9.3x62 though. Loaded with a good 286gr bullet it is lethal on Buffalo, I’ve taken a few with it.
I would swap scope though if you decide on the 9.3, mount the Leupold 1.5-5x20 on it for close quarters work.
He cannot handle the recoil so he is better off with the 9.3x62 mm it is an easy one.416 Remington Magnum and 400Gr Barnes TSX.
Sectional density is the least impactful parameter to a bullets performance. Nose profile is key to straight line penetration. Michael McCurry aka "Mad Scientist Doc McCurry", Sam Rose and myself have tested many kinds of projectiles. Large flat nose bullets have been proven to be the best combination for deep straight line penetration. Use a flat nose solid projectile that has between 60-67% meplat diameter and you will be good to go.Hi, I need advice please. I can shoot a 9.3 x 62 without any problem (no problem with the recoil up to 286 grain bullets)) like wise I am comfortable with a .416 Rem mag up to 300 grain bullets (Peregrine VRG3). However I cannot handle the recoil of the400 grain bullets in the .416 Rem mag.
What would your advice be, please:
I would sincerely appreciate advice from the forum.
- To hunt buffalo which rifle (and bullet there fore) would be the best.
- The sectional density of a 286 grain 9.3 bullet is .305 and that of a 300 grain .416 bullet is .245 will the 9.3 necessarily penetrate better than the .416 in buffalo ?
- Besides using these rifles for buffalo, which one rifle with the applicable bullet weight could also be used to hunt other game.?(Giraffe, eland, impala, warthog, blue wildebeest, red hartebeest and oryx)
Thank you in advance.
AJS
Hi EJ
I use 286 gr VRG 3 Peregrine bullets in my 9.3 X 62 which is a flat nose nose bullet.
View attachment 509348
Thank you for your post.
Regards
AJS
Hi EJ
I use 286 gr VRG 3 Peregrine bullets in my 9.3 X 62 which is a flat nose nose bullet.
View attachment 509348
Thank you for your post.
Regards
AJS