If the 9.3x62 became the new legal minimum?


A very good article about the 9,3x64 here
 
Hi Antho,

Very good experience about same cartridge/different barrel lenght. Of course, in my opinion, it should be considered valid only for this case.
The differences between 9,3x62 vs 9,3x64 vs 375 H&H (must be said again: "all other factors being the same"), are simple physics or thermodynamics, not a belief.
Best!

CF
 
Hello Clodo,

Sorry, .com dummy here and don't have the talent to post pics, my 9.3x62mm is loaned out to a friend right now, he's off on some hunts with it, just as well, it's not the beauty it once was.

You see, the shipping goons broke the beautiful English walnut stock at the wrist I had made for it, that and the beautiful Rust bluing are but a memory, however, all is not lost, I sent the barreled action, bottom metal, scope rings and bases to Brown Precision.

He built a beautiful rock solid syn stock and coated ALL metal parts in teflon, the rifle is now an all weather, any game animal, anywhere the world over hunting rig, I did have them retain the beautiful jeweling on the bolt body, claw extractor and extractor retention ring, as well as the magazine box follower.

It's 1.75x6 Leupold scope will guide those big Woodleighs into big game animals out to a long 350 yards, so all remains more than good, I'll have the rifle back in a couple months, will re-check zero, may even use it and the big 320gr Woodleighs on some whitetails this season.
 
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When you load the 9.3x62-9.3x64-375H&H to the same pressure levels with bullets they were designed for(9.3=286gr and 375=300gr). The difference is within 150fps . At DG ranges with the bullet in the proper shot placement no animal on earth will know the difference.
 
When you load the 9.3x62-9.3x64-375H&H to the same pressure levels with bullets they were designed for(9.3=286gr and 375=300gr). The difference is within 150fps . At DG ranges with the bullet in the proper shot placement no animal on earth will know the difference.

It is certain that at close ranges, the difference in the effectiveness of 9,3mm and 375 caliber cartridges can be comparable. Nevertheless, one should consider the impact velocity of a bullet, which is a more important parameter than the muzzle velocity. Many bullet failures are due to a lack of impact velocity sometime in relation to a lower muzzle velocity. The higher the muzzle velocity is, the more reserve one has in terms of bullet effectiveness, especially if shooting at longer distances is necessary. 150 fps more muzzle velocity can make a difference. In this respect, the cartridge 9,3x64 offers, due to a better external ballistic than that of the cartridge 9,3x62, significant advantages as a multipurpose cartridge.
 
@grand veneur I agree on longer shots over 250 meters but this thread is about "If 9.3x62 was the new legal minimum." So to me that means dangerous game where the longest shot is going to 75 Meter-ish on leopard, hippo, and croc, Buff, lion, and elephant are all going to be under 50 meters. So the ballistic difference is a mute point in my book. Shoot which ever of the 3 you have the most confidence in.
 
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@grand veneur I agree on longer shots over 250 meters but this thread is about "If 9.3x62 was the new legal minimum." So to me that means dangerous game where the longest shot is going to 75 Meter-ish on leopard, hippo, and croc, Buff, lion, and elephant are all going to be under 50 meters. So the ballistic difference is a mute point in my book. Shoot which ever of the 3 you have the most confidence in.

Sure, if you consider shooting distances of up to 50 meters maximum, there are hardly any noticeable differences. But there is room for discussion about shooting distances on DG always being under 50 meters.
 
Gentlemen,

This is where the 9.3x62mm really shines for me, went and grabbed my old load book with sight drops.

+3 at 100 yards with the 320gr Woodleigh PP bullet leaving the muzzle at 2424 fps again zeros around 215 yards, 9 inches low at 300 yards and 18 inches down at 350 yards.

At 350 yards that bullet is still traveling in excess of Woodleighs minimum impact rec of 1800 fps, bullet impacts are 0, +1 and +2 inches at 25, 50 and 75 yards, Buffalo at the end of the barrel to trophy Bull Eland, Kudu, Moose and Elk of a lifetime at 350 yards is more than well covered.

I gave my rifle and load a 7 inch vital zone window, that's a full 290 yards maximum point blank zero range, quite a handy little do it all package men.
 
I am just using my experience and conversations with a number of PH and outfitters for the 50 yard average. My wife shot her buffalo at 72 yards I shot mine at 22 yards, my lion was at 28 yards. The hippo was at 48 meters, my wife’s croc was at 70 yards. My leopard was 68 meters. I back a friend up on his elephant, my back up shot was 25 yards. My bouncing between meters and yards is based on if I took the range (yards) or my Ph (meters). If you want to use 100 yards/meters as average. When I compair my 9.3x62 300gr 2475fps most accurate load to my 300 gr 275 2615fps most accurate load in my rifles. The difference in impact is less that 1/2 in difference of impact.

Over the years I looked at the 9.3x64 and 370 sake. And could justify the added expense of a second round. Plus the logistics of have x62 brass and dies readily available in the US and the other two very difficult to find.

So just use the round that works for you as the 9.3 and 375’s are very good rounds.
 
9.3x74R O/U double, 2 triggers, ejectors, scoped.....
 
When you load the 9.3x62-9.3x64-375H&H to the same pressure levels with bullets they were designed for (9.3=286gr and 375=300gr). The difference is within 150fps . At DG ranges with the bullet in the proper shot placement no animal on earth will know the difference.

I totally agree with the above, but with caveats that cleary outline that the 9.3x62, while by general consensus meeting the bare minimum practical requirements for Buffalo, does not fully compare with the .375 H&H and 9.3x64, which are true ballistic equals.

Said caveats are:
  1. The 9.3x62 only "compares" at a lower buller weight, although, admittedly, 5% does not make a huge difference, but at bare minimum level everything counts.
  2. Despite a lower bullet weight, the 9.3x62 only "compares" at lower velocity, although, admittedly, 150 fps at the muzzle does not make a huge difference, but at bare minimum level everything counts, not to mention grand veneur's point at impact velocity.
  3. The 9.3x62 lower energy resulting from the combination of the above only "compares" at shorter range, although, admittedly, DG is generally shot at short range, but second and third shot can be noticeably longer than 25 yards ... or shorter, in which case the point above about energy becomes very interesting...)
  4. Much more important: the 9.3x62 only "compares" when herbivorous DG are limited to Buffalo. No one in their right mind generally considers the 9.3x62 OK on Elephant, Rhino, or Hippo.
So, will any "animal on earth know the difference" between a 9.3x62 286 gr TSX delivering 3,000 ft/lbs and a .375 H&H 300 gr TSX delivering 4,000 ft/lbs at 25 yards? I indeed suspect that few animals will, because it seems that 3,000 ft/lbs from a DG caliber still do the job, even if with zero safety margin.

But will an Elephant, Rhino, or Hippo know the difference between a 9.3x62 286 gr TSX delivering 2,500 ft/lbs and a .375 H&H 300 gr TSX delivering 3,500 ft/lbs at 100 yards? Oh yes I think they will, because 2,500 ft/lbs from a DG caliber is courting disaster.

The bottom line is that we all know that energy does not kill, but we also all know that energy is a convenient and quite accurate way to compare killing power when discussing cartridges that shoot identical bullets of similar weight and caliber. From this perspective there is no escaping the fact that the 9.3x62 delivers 1,000 ft/lbs or 25% less than the .375 H&H (3,200 vs. 4.200 ft/lbs at the muzzle).

The entire question, therefore, is for which animals is 3,000 ft/lbs at 25 yards sufficient?

Over 100 years of field experience seems to indicate a fairly unanimous consent that Buffalo is at the very upper limit of the enveloppe.

The 9.3x62 is good (heck, it is the DG caliber I selected for my wife!), but only because the .375 H&H is too much gun for her, and only because I stand by her with my .458 Lott in case that magical first bullet does not land where it should (it can happen...) OR unless the Buff does not get the memo that he is dead (it can happen too...).

So, should the 9.3x62 replace the .375 H&H as the legal minimum everywhere, my own vote is NO, it is not powerful enough on ALL animals in MOST reasonable circumstances. That is why Zimbabwe requires 5,300 Joule (3,900 ft/lbs) Minimum AND a caliber 9.2 mm (.366") Minimum for Class A Game (Elephant, Hippo, Buffalo), and I do not think that they historically developed these numbers at random ;)
 
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