Tubby’s Canteen
AH elite
Has anyone considered a .375 win for leopard? Still a fast handling model 94, ae allows for top mounted optics and would be .375 cal so possibly meets legal requirements.
Has anyone considered a .375 win for leopard? Still a fast handling model 94, ae allows for top mounted optics and would be .375 cal so possibly meets legal requirements.
I've been pleased with Remington factory 170 grain Core-lokt. I tried Winchester both in 150 and 170 grain loads, Remington 150 grain, none were as accurate. I know this isn't helpful for your handload development, sorry.Those of you that shoot Marlin 30-30s with the micro groove barrels that are able shoot tight groupings please share what bullets / loads you are using , would be greatly appreciated .
I have a Marlin 336 but have not yet done any real load development yet , and what I have used thus far has not been that accurate .
@Paul RaleyThank you for the replies thus re the ammo your Marlins prefer for getting tight groupings . I have been shooting 170 gr bullets until now so I will now experiment a bit with 150 grs .
Hunter Habib I agree with you , the 30-30 is good for a lot of African plains game animals , but for sure too light and too weak under most circumstances for anything bigger or tougher than Blue Wildebeest , and definitely too little gun for dangerous game , and then some might say it might be too weak for Wildebeest .I would happily use it on bushbuck, impala & bush pig. Esp. with the 170Gr Winchester Super X flat nosed soft point.
But I would not touch it for dangerous game.
Lever guns are notorious for vertically stringing shots with different weight bullets or velocity. In saying that, you can say they are velocity sensitive, so all things being reasonably the same, a lower velocity load will print lower on the target, and as the velocity goes up, so does the grouping. If you can, chronograph the load. I've owned a lot of lever guns of all types, and noticed that even different bullet weights hit near the same point of aim if the velocity was about the same at 100 yds. If memory serves me right, on average I was getting about 0.5" elevation difference per 40-50 fps change.Obviously it has been a "couple" of years now since the original discussion above , but for those of you that might be interested , I managed to find a fairly accurate load for my Marlin micro groove barrelled 30-30 .
I used 150 gr Sierra FN bullets with 33 gr of South African S335 powder and CCI 200 LR primers . Unfortunately I was unable to chrony the load . The grouping is low on the attached target but it is a good grouping , I obviously adjusted the elevation afterwards .The distance is 100 m
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Those Kynoch 170gr where made by Winchester and are Winchester silver tipMy Winchester 30-30 was one of the rifles that arrived around Christmas in the shipment from Paul where they had been in storage ...slight problem is ammunition , as over here it's obviously not too common a rifle calibre....looking around in the nooks and crannies of the big gun /ammo vault in the gunshop I use I unearthed 4 boxes of these....bit different ...but at least something to play with...unlike my 45-70 for which no ammo is to be found....my gunshop guy has been trying to get 30-30 and 45-70 ammo for over a year for me , as I asked way before they were being shipped...but he not having much luck for some reason...
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Thanks for the advice , I need to experiment some more , but until now most of the ammunition which I have shot with the rifle has been 170 grn factory ammo of various makes and all of them print all over the place . The only ammo that has grouped well is the reload I mentioned above . From research I am led to believe that the micro groove barrel Marlin rifles are quite difficult to get to shoot tight groups .Lever guns are notorious for vertically stringing shots with different weight bullets or velocity. In saying that, you can say they are velocity sensitive, so all things being reasonably the same, a lower velocity load will print lower on the target, and as the velocity goes up, so does the grouping. If you can, chronograph the load. I've owned a lot of lever guns of all types, and noticed that even different bullet weights hit near the same point of aim if the velocity was about the same at 100 yds. If memory serves me right, on average I was getting about 0.5" elevation difference per 40-50 fps change.