So, if my 115 lb daughter can manage the 9.3x62, would you see that as sufficient for hippo on land? (Note: I don’t *really* need an excuse to buy another barrel for the R8) I’m hoping to find someone who has used this caliber to good effect on hippo. @Tanks I see you use a 9.3x74, which is close to the same, would you hunt a hippo with it?On land biggest bore you are accurate with, for me that would be .500NE
In water any mid bore+ that is accurate for very precise shots.
Sufficient for hippo? Have you used yours on a hippo or other large game?9.3x62 not quite as much recoil and mine will shoot sub Mia at 200 yds with Norma factory ammo and hand loads.
For brain shots a confidant shooter not worried about recoil is the ticket.
Yes for sureSo, if my 115 lb daughter can manage the 9.3x62, would you see that as sufficient for hippo on land? (Note: I don’t *really* need an excuse to buy another barrel for the R8) I’m hoping to find someone who has used this caliber to good effect on hippo. @Tanks I see you use a 9.3x74, which is close to the same, would you hunt a hippo with it?
Sufficient for hippo? Have you used yours on a hippo or other large game?
I suppose another idea is to just get the barrel and have her practice with the 9.3x62 as it is less recoil than the .375, but then bring the .375 and have her use that. At some point there is a cutoff where a person who wants to hunt a big animal needs to commit to becoming proficient with more recoil. I want to get her there by working up to it.
I suspect many of us had the experience of being handed a .30-06 at around age 10 and discovered the definition of recoil. In my youth we went from .22LR to a .270 or a .30-06, that was an eye opener. There were very few .243’s around, most dads just had their elk rifle and that is what you used. (Another note: no one I knew had 6,12, or 20+ rifles in their safe to choose from, that seems to be more common today)
post script: this is exactly why the 6.5CM is so popular, it is a great caliber for kids and fun to shoot for adults, like a .22LR but more noise. But if it got named the 6.5 Kid Gun, it wouldn’t be popular.
So, if my 115 lb daughter can manage the 9.3x62, would you see that as sufficient for hippo on land? (Note: I don’t *really* need an excuse to buy another barrel for the R8) I’m hoping to find someone who has used this caliber to good effect on hippo. @Tanks I see you use a 9.3x74, which is close to the same, would you hunt a hippo with it?
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Hello Tra3;Fellow members I am in need of advice on what additional caliber for an R8 I should get for hippo, etc. I’ve posted the R8 caliber chart below. I already have a .375h&h barrel. I would prefer to stay in the standard contour barrel profile for another barrel as my R8 is not opened up for the thicker barrels. I understand I cannot take two rifles in the same caliber to Africa.
It looks like I’ll be returning to hunt again in 2022. My daughter would like to hunt a hippo. I prefer to carry a rifle when we are in the bush, so I need another barrel that will go on her R8 (or mine). It is likely that I will travel with the rifle case, so I’m limited to two rifles: 375H&H and ???. (She will already be in africa before I get there.)
I have no experience with the 9.3x62. I do not reload. Will that work? I see there is a blaser .375 mag… sounds like an impossible to get ammo caliber. Should I just stick with a .375 and a PG caliber and not worry about carrying a similar caliber as the PH will have a .500NE?
She is a small person, maybe 115 lbs, but tough and rides and jumps horses as her hobby. After seeing video of @BeeMaa shooting an R8 with a .416, that looked like a bit much of a horse for this guy.
I’ll will be inquiring of my PH for his advice as well.
I know some of you have gone through this though process of what barrel combos for an R8 for yourself and/or for an aspiring youth, so I’d appreciate suggestions. @One Day... @Philip Glass @375Fox @Ridgewalker
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Hello Tra3;
Sorry for a delayed answer, I just came back yesterday night from my elephant hunt on communal land on the Gwayi River, in the Hwange corridor, in Zimbabwe.
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Nice Elephant and wow, I didn't realise a Hippo could be taken close 'ish with PH calibres. Eg .270 or Bob's .25 even.Hello Tra3;
Sorry for a delayed answer, I just came back yesterday night from my elephant hunt on communal land on the Gwayi River, in the Hwange corridor, in Zimbabwe.
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I have not read the entire thread yet, so I apologize if I repeat what may have already been said, but there are essentially two types of hippo hunts:
1- Hippo in the water: this typically involves one brain shot at typically short range around 50 yards. Precision, precision, precision... are the 3 key operating words, and the brain is not protected by a very thick bone structure. Any medium size PG caliber and good quality bullet on the heavy side will work; ideally a solid, but I reckon a TSX or AFrame does the job too. I would look into .270 Win and up.
2- Hippo on land: this generally involves several body shots at short and sometimes very shot distance, with a significant possibility of a charge (it is said that hippo kill more people every year than all the Big 5 combined...). Stopping power are the two operating words, and the hippo is notoriously a bullet sponge. The .458 Lott and up are likely good medicine, but the .375 H&H and 9.3x62 with TSX or A Frame will do the killing job too, although they are objectively weak for the stopping job.
It seems that the water hunt is likely best suited for your daughter, so if she already has a PG barrel of at least .25 caliber (preferably at least .27 caliber), you do not need to buy another barrel, but I would suggest buying some ammo for plenty of practice from the sticks at 100 yards. She needs to be able to keep her shots in a 2" to 3" bullseye standing from the sticks at that distance
Didn't use your .470?
R8 wins again. Congratulations on your Elephant!I carried it for 7 days in very dense jesse, and ended it up grabbing the scoped .375 for a 58 meters shot across a clearing...
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Nice elephant indeed! I hope a hunting report is forthcoming. I also used an R8 in .375 for ele this summer and for a hippo (I need to put together a report!)Hello Tra3;
Sorry for a delayed answer, I just came back yesterday night from my elephant hunt on communal land on the Gwayi River, in the Hwange corridor, in Zimbabwe.
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I have not read the entire thread yet, so I apologize if I repeat what may have already been said, but there are essentially two types of hippo hunts:
1- Hippo in the water: this typically involves one brain shot at typically short range around 50 yards. Precision, precision, precision... are the 3 key operating words, and the brain is not protected by a very thick bone structure. Any medium size PG caliber and good quality bullet on the heavy side will work; ideally a solid, but I reckon a TSX or AFrame does the job too. I would look into .270 Win and up.
2- Hippo on land: this generally involves several body shots at short and sometimes very shot distance, with a significant possibility of a charge (it is said that hippo kill more people every year than all the Big 5 combined...). Stopping power are the two operating words, and the hippo is notoriously a bullet sponge. The .458 Lott and up are likely good medicine, but the .375 H&H and 9.3x62 with TSX or A Frame will do the killing job too, although they are objectively weak for the stopping job.
It seems that the water hunt is likely best suited for your daughter, so if she already has a PG barrel of at least .25 caliber (preferably at least .27 caliber), you do not need to buy another barrel, but I would suggest buying some ammo for plenty of practice from the sticks at 100 yards. She needs to be able to keep her shots in a 2" to 3" bullseye standing from the sticks at that distance
I’m doing a similar program, shortening the stock and adding a kick stop and thicker recoil pad. Because of the reduced length, I was told I can only put a 12 Oz kick stop in the rifle.Congratulations on your bull and hippo Tra3. Very nice !
Regarding the 9.3x62 question in a R8, I can answer very specifically because I bought a R8 pro (alloy receiver) for my wife recently --- another report that is late in coming
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Mrs. One Day with the first animal (Mouflon) taken with her Blaser R8.
I had Blaser shorten the stock by 1.5" and I put a standard .270 Win barrel on it with Zeiss V4 4-16x44 BT scope for PG, and a standard 9.6x62 barrel with Blaser RD20 red dot for DG. I call it the "Baby Blaser"
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R8 Pro Blaser with stock shortened 1.5" by Blaser, with 22.8" standard length & standard contour .270 Win and 9.3x62 barrels, under a standard R8 PH Blaser with 25.6" semi-weight .375 H&H barrel.
The actual recoil experience reflects accurately the theoretical calculations.
The .270 Win R8 pro (alloy receiver) with Zeiss V4 4-16x44, without kickstop, weighs 9.2 lbs. and generates 14.6 ft./lbs. of recoil energy at 10.1 fps when shooting a 130 gr TTSX at 3,060 fps.
The 9.3x62 R8 pro (alloy receiver) with Blaser RD20 red dot weighs 8.6 lbs. WITH a "16 oz." kickstop (mine actually weighs 17.5 oz.) and generates 32.9 ft./lbs. of recoil energy at 15.7 fps when shooting a 286 gr TSX at 2,350 fps.
Both mathematics and actual shooting experience are very clear, in these configurations the 9.3x62 recoils 2.25 more than the .270 Win...
With a Past recoil shield, my wife shoots the 9.3x62 fine standing from the sticks, but this about as much recoil as she can handle.
PS: It is worth noting that the 9.3x62 in her 8.6 lbs. R8 Pro (alloy receiver) actually recoils more than the .375 H&H does in my 11.5 lbs. semi-weight barreled R8 PH (steel receiver) with Leica 1-6.3x24 scope (31.7 ft./lbs.). Weight simply soaks up recoil...
That's clever, and proactiveHowever, I decided on the red dot in order to absolutely guaranty, no matter what, that there will never be a scope-cut episode with the 9.3, which would promptly defeat months of progressive confidence building