Great caliber but I am in the same ammo boat with my 500 Jeff......If it is only one firearm I would go with 450 Rigby. Lots of bullets avsilable. Is versatile for mediam and very large game. Provided you stock up on brass and reload.
Krish
Many will disagree with me but I've always viewed anything >0.40 as a big bore.The 400's are not big bores.....
For me big bore and stopper are synonymous and that starts at .458 cal in tandem with proper ballisticsMany will disagree with me but I've always viewed anything >0.40 as a big bore.
I used to think my 375H&H was a big bore until I was shown the error of my ways.
The 375s I can agree with, the 40s still feel like they should be big bores.
Everything has been "scaled down" in caliber since the black powder days so the medium bores of 1900 are the new starting point of big bores today.
8.8cm KwK 36If you had to pick one for overall utility and enjoyment.
the 500 Jeffery needs More votesI put my tick against 500 J
Only coz the question was about big bores - which I read as large bore
That excludes ( in my OCD brain ) the medium calibres like 375, 404 j, 416 etc
I might have ticked the Lott, but it was pidgin holed with 458 Win (which once again my tiny little OCD brain couldn’t deal with)
OK there you arethe 500 Jeffery needs More votes
Energy matters but so does diameter..IMHO, I think small bores go up to .308, medium bores extend to sub .400, and above .400 rifles calibers are the base of big bores. A .416 Rigby/Rem. Mag have more energy than a .458WM.
I think any caliber that can hurl a 400gr bullet and create in excess of 5000lbs of energy should be considered a big bore.Energy matters but so does diameter..