Buffalo rifle show and tell

Iron sights. Heavy cover no sling. Wide open cover sling is okay. Wooden stock and a classic caliber. Why anything else? Old school is the best school.
 
My Buffalo set up is a left handed Ruger African in 375 Ruger.
Scope is the Leupold VX5 2-10 with the CDS and the fire dot.
Sling is by Murray Leather. Very comfortable and super easy to adjust.
I used a Murray Leather cartridge belt. Super comfortable, did not know I was wearing it.
Ammo hand loaded, Barnes 300 Grain TSX @ 2550 fps.
This bull was taken at about 60 yards, with a single shot. He ran roughly 40 yards and dropped.
View attachment 698044View attachment 698045View attachment 698046View attachment 698047

My buddy who was also using a 375 Ruger, shot his Buffalo with Hornady DGX 300 grain factory load. His bullet shed 52 grains of its weight. While the bullet stayed together the weight retention performance was mediocre. The Barnes TSX weighed 299.7 grains.
View attachment 698048View attachment 698049
That sounds about right. Two Barnes TSX 375 bullets recovered from my buffalo bull weighed 248 and 246 grains. The 248 mushroomed perfectly just like yours. Destroyed both lungs and lodged in the ribcage of opposite shoulder. The 246 gr bullet was more distorted after entering chest, exiting at back end of rib cage, and crushing left rear knee where it was found. 250 gr bullets did the job. Amazing weight retention.
 
Last edited:
Thanks, I plan on keeping an a optic on the rifle and have iron sights as backup if needed. I will probably go to a lower power scope if it was a dedicated DG rifle. Its currently wearing a 3-18 X 50 Z6 and I will probably change that out for a 1-6
Yeah, that sounds like a solid plan—keeping iron sights as a backup is always smart. I’ve been thinking about switching to something more versatile myself, maybe a lower power scope like a 1-6 or similar. I recently checked out the Gunnr Odin 1-8x24 and it seems like a great balance of clarity and durability without going overboard. Definitely worth considering if you want something reliable for different ranges.
 
Yeah, that sounds like a solid plan—keeping iron sights as a backup is always smart. I’ve been thinking about switching to something more versatile myself, maybe a lower power scope like a 1-6 or similar. I recently checked out the Gunnr Odin 1-8x24 and it seems like a great balance of clarity and durability without going overboard. Definitely worth considering if you want something reliable for different ranges.
Haven’t heard of Gunnr optics, I’ll have to check them out
 
1st Buff shot with a 400H&H and a 1x6 Swaro scope..
Next 2 Buff left the scoped rifles home..
29632352_Unknown.jpeg
IMG_0814.jpeg
Top pic my 1902 Gibbs 450NE 28" Barrels ... Bottom pic with my 505 Gibbs
 
I have zero buffalo experience but this one will get the nod if/when one is on the menu.

Montana 1999 in .400 Whelen. Albeit at higher pressure, it lines up pretty well to .450/400 NE 3” numbers so should work just fine. Open sights, 21” barrel, low power scope andQD scope mounts. I wish I had done a barrel band before it was cerakoted but did not. Handy but still has enough heft to be stable offhand or on sticks.

It is sitting at Satterlee Arms as we speak getting throated to max out the COL of the 400 Woodleigh RN, make sure feeding is 100% reliable and extend the LOP a bit.

Has only taken antelope, deer and moose so far but no complaints.
IMG_1705.jpeg
 
I have zero buffalo experience but this one will get the nod if/when one is on the menu.

Montana 1999 in .400 Whelen. Albeit at higher pressure, it lines up pretty well to .450/400 NE 3” numbers so should work just fine. Open sights, 21” barrel, low power scope andQD scope mounts. I wish I had done a barrel band before it was cerakoted but did not. Handy but still has enough heft to be stable offhand or on sticks.

It is sitting at Satterlee Arms as we speak getting throated to max out the COL of the 400 Woodleigh RN, make sure feeding is 100% reliable and extend the LOP a bit.

Has only taken antelope, deer and moose so far but no complaints.View attachment 700130
Save your money and go to Africa! Once it's in your blood you'll understand....I cant wait to go back next year on my second safari.
 
Here is my most recent and biggest buffalo. Maybe not for everyone, but it took 1 shot, ran 50 yards and died. 41 1/2" Thompson Contender, 375 JDJ, 270 Fail Safe bullet. Easier to carry than a rifle too.
1752681991252.png
 
I have zero buffalo experience but this one will get the nod if/when one is on the menu.

Montana 1999 in .400 Whelen. Albeit at higher pressure, it lines up pretty well to .450/400 NE 3” numbers so should work just fine. Open sights, 21” barrel, low power scope andQD scope mounts. I wish I had done a barrel band before it was cerakoted but did not. Handy but still has enough heft to be stable offhand or on sticks.

It is sitting at Satterlee Arms as we speak getting throated to max out the COL of the 400 Woodleigh RN, make sure feeding is 100% reliable and extend the LOP a bit.

Has only taken antelope, deer and moose so far but no complaints.View attachment 700130
Curious why you have Warne QD levers on left side. Seems like it makes more sense to have all protrusions (windage turret, bolt handle, ring levers, and safety lever) all on the right side, especially if you're right handed. Having my scope levers on right side does not in any way restrict loading or extraction/ejection.
20250420_223646.jpg
 
Curious why you have Warne QD levers on left side. Seems like it makes more sense to have all protrusions (windage turret, bolt handle, ring levers, and safety lever) all on the right side, especially if you're right handed. Having my scope levers on right side does not in any way restrict loading or extraction/ejection.
View attachment 700275

I guess I don't have a great answer. When I started using QD rings I didn't want anything extra near the ejection port and figured the left side made more sense. Have them that way on 2 or 3 rifles and haven't seen where they cause an issue for me on the left side.
 
I guess I don't have a great answer. When I started using QD rings I didn't want anything extra near the ejection port and figured the left side made more sense. Have them that way on 2 or 3 rifles and haven't seen where they cause an issue for me on the left side.
I'm right handed and prefer to do everything to my rifle with right hand: e.g. load, cycle, remove scope covers, and lift off scope when detaching it. Seems awkward switching to holding rifle with right hand so I can work ring levers and lift the scope off with left hand. Then switch hands again to operate the rifle.
 
I'm right handed and prefer to do everything to my rifle with right hand: e.g. load, cycle, remove scope covers, and lift off scope when detaching it. Seems awkward switching to holding rifle with right hand so I can work ring levers and lift the scope off with left hand. Then switch hands again to operate the rifle.
Jeez-Az-Krist. I'm right handed also and my QD levers are on the left side, but really it doesn't a nats but if difference since I don't use the scope anyway.
 
This is without kickstop.

View attachment 699379

Note that the Leica 1-6x24 is relatively heavy so the rifle itself without scope & mount is 9 3/4 lb.

The scoped rifle is actually quite pleasant to shoot at 11 1/2 lb. with the scope.

The 16 oz. kickstop (mine actually weighs 17.5 oz.) comes standard with the PH (steel components) stock. It makes the rifle comfortable to shoot at 10 3/4 lb. without scope, but too heavy - in my taste - when scoped. It is just a matter of minutes to unscrew it from the stock, or screw it back in.


PS: The lightest you could go would be:

View attachment 699383

This is one advantage of the R8, you can customize to your test endlessly, but I can tell you that just 3 shots of full house .458 Lott loads (500 gr @ 2,300 fps) in an 8+ Lb. rifle will give most folks, me included, a persistent headache (i.e. proof of a mild concussion)...
Your “as light as you can go” weight is spot on. My 458 Win Mag Professional with Selous barrel weighs 8lbs 4oz unloaded with no scope. I use a lightweight Leupold 1.5-5x20 scope and end up at 9lbs 15oz with 4 rounds in the magazine/chamber. The 458 Win Mag has a bit less recoil than the Lott, so it’s actually very comfortable to shoot from sticks, or a standing bench.
 

Forum statistics

Threads
62,042
Messages
1,361,706
Members
117,954
Latest member
NannieLewa
 

 

 
 
Top