In Rifle Magazine in March-April 2005, an article was written about an Alaskan professional hunter (guide) Ed Stevenson. He has over 44 years of "continual" experince guiding for the big bears in Alaska. Not only that, but he lives in one of his hunting camps year round. He NEVER leaves the house without a rifle in his hand because big (10 foot, 1000+ pounds) bears are common in the area. He was once, early in his professional career, attacked at short range by a 10 foot bear after his hunter client had just killed another 10 foot bear. Before the bear got to him, he shot the bear ONCE with his (then) trusted 375 H&H. The muzzle flash of his rifle drew the bear's rage to himself and away from his client. The bear still hit Stevenson, drove him underwater at the edge of the river while biting him and jumping on him with all 4 feet. The client hunter emptied his 375 Weatherby Mag into the bear while it was mauling Stevenson, eventually ending the attack (and the bear). After recovering, Stevenson went right back to work, but started looking for a different rifle/caliber combination for protecting himself and his clients. He eventually settled on a modern leverguns, Browning 1886 in .45 caliber or Browning 1895 (Winchester 1895 clone without tang safety) lever action .411 caliber (411 hawk).
The writer closed the article with these statements:
On loads Stevenson carries in his Browning 1895, .411, levergun:
"Ed reports that once cases have been fireformed and the shoulder established, he has experienced no reliability issues or misfires. Ed’s handloads drive a 360-grain North Fork bullet around 2,200 to 2,350 fps and the 350-grain Barnes X-Bullets to about the same velocity. In discussing various cartridges, Ed is particularly thrilled with the .411 and probably uses it more than any other, at least on big bears, and has yet to experience a failure."
On Stevenson's choice of lever actions:
"In looking over the leverguns and cartridges Ed uses daily, one may wonder if he is stuck in tradition. Be certain that he is not. His leverguns get used considerably and are constantly exposed to the elements, giving a rifle that is only a few years old the appearance of being nearly a century old. Nonetheless, they have proven worthy, giving reliable service with virtually no failures."
"Regardless of whether we agree with Ed’s choices of cartridges or not, the fact remains they have been chosen based on 44 years of continual experience in the Alaskan bush, which is hard to argue with."
I have just purchased a NOS Browing 1895 in 30-06, and it will soon be on its way to be rebored to 400 Whelen (G&H/Petrov). I plan to take it to Africa for DG. I will use a 400gr .411 bullet at 2150- 2200fps. This is about 100-150 fps faster than the highly praised 450/400 NE double rifle round built its reputation on.