Or those who have used them and moved on to.more effective weapons.The people who knock the levers are those who never use em.
Those knocking them in this thread fall firmly in the “haven’t given them a go” category.Or those who have used them and moved on to.more effective weapons.
What I was saying is the last thing you would want in your hands in that situation is your dick.Or a 45-70..lever action.....unless you can show me 1 dg ph who uses one for follow up on wounded cape buffalo......
Or those who have used them and moved on to.more effective weapons.
Oh please. Do you think that everyone that uses bolt action rifles didn't start with levers? I did, and so did most of he guys I grew up hunting with. We all graduated to bolt actions. Lever actions do not commonly come in calibers that are suitable for the open country of the Western states. Only those who refuse to let go of the past will see any lever gun as adequate for big dangerous game.Those knocking them in this thread fall firmly in the “haven’t given them a go” category.
People basing info on outdated ballistics also. If we did that then the Brit cartridges would seem woefully inadequate - especially if we based it on the velocity they actually achieved vs advertised velocity.
Oh please. Do you think that everyone that uses bolt action rifles didn't start with levers? I did, and so did most of he guys I grew up hunting with. We all graduated to bolt actions. Lever actions do not commonly come in calibers that are suitable for the open country of the Western states. Only those who refuse to let go of the past will see any lever gun as adequate for big dangerous game.
I was responding to the poster that said those that those that didn't care for lever actions had not "given them a go." I have taken several mule deer bucks and a wild boar with a muzzle loader. I like haunting with them but I do not want to compete with other hunters using modern rifles during a modern firearm season.You greatly over-generalize sir. I started with bolt actions, and had good success with them. For the past 16 years I have used nothing but lever actions because I enjoy hunting with them more than I do other types of actions - and I have a high rate of success. I have 2 Cape buffalo thus far and, God willing, I will hunt other DG species with lever actions in the future. I have had long correspondences with several sponsors of this site about hunting different species of DG and I have yet to have a single one tell me it would be a bad idea.
If you don't like the idea of lever actions, or you do not feel they are adequate for how you hunt, I respect that. But don't paint those of us who don't agree with you with that brush.
And I know no one who started in a lever gun. All bolts.Oh please. Do you think that everyone that uses bolt action rifles didn't start with levers? I did, and so did most of he guys I grew up hunting with. We all graduated to bolt actions. Lever actions do not commonly come in calibers that are suitable for the open country of the Western states. Only those who refuse to let go of the past will see any lever gun as adequate for big dangerous game.
His rifle had a malfunction? What was it? Bolt? All actions can failI was responding to the poster that said those that those that didn't care for lever actions had not "given them a go." I have taken several mule deer bucks and a wild boar with a muzzle loader. I like haunting with them but I do not want to compete with other hunters using modern rifles during a modern firearm season.
On my first safari I used a .458 Win Mag to stop a buffalo charging my PH at about 10 feet. His rifle had a function problem. I might have been able to do it with a .45-70, but I and the PH were glad that I didn't have to try.
If you prefer using lever actions, knock yourself out, but don't suggest that those that don't are somehow less able than those who do.
I never said they were less able to do things than if they had a lever. Where the heck did that come from?I was responding to the poster that said those that those that didn't care for lever actions had not "given them a go." I have taken several mule deer bucks and a wild boar with a muzzle loader. I like haunting with them but I do not want to compete with other hunters using modern rifles during a modern firearm season.
On my first safari I used a .458 Win Mag to stop a buffalo charging my PH at about 10 feet. His rifle had a function problem. I might have been able to do it with a .45-70, but I and the PH were glad that I didn't have to try.
If you prefer using lever actions, knock yourself out, but don't suggest that those that don't are somehow less able than those who do.
@IvW - to be clear, my PH in TZ was a “fan” of the .45-70 and had seen “many buffalo taken with it” but never said it was the Best buffalo round and doubt he thought it superior to his .416 Rem or my .470NE.Wishfull thinking.....I would as a client not hunt with a ph who thinks a 45-70 is a stopping cartridge....
"Over thinking" on buffalo.....fu....me.....the last thing I want in my hands is a 45-70 lever action when the shit hits the fan on a cape buffalo hunt......
@Doug Hamilton - like a Browning .50 cal machine gun? Don’t you think “effective” is hitting your target where you intended with a well constructed bullet? Also, that the 1st shot is almost always the most important one. I can’t knock a rifle design that has worked so effectively for 150 years especially since the animals are still exactly the same….only our attitudes have changed. A Spear to a Bow = improvement, Bow to a Rifle = improvement, Rifle to Rifle = incremental progress.Or those who have used them and moved on to.more effective weapons.
@AustinM - I’m not a gunsmith so not certain what Lever action “modifications” you mention regarding “barrel threading” are needed to achieve velocities of 2100 fps with .400 gr bullets? I did chrono my “stock” Marlin 1895 and got almost exactly the advertised fps on Buffalo bore 350 & 405 gr , 430 gr ammo —- I went with the 350 gr except when hunting bear over bait at closer ranges. It seemed the fps Buffalo Bore claims is accurate — at least thru my Marlin 1895.If one wanted to seriously take the 45-70 on a dangerous game hunt from Buffalo, a few things should happen.
1. Modification for the 45-70 to operate at longer OAL, with the goal being 2.73". Along with proper barrel threading to reinforce this modification. It is feasible to achieve 2100-2150 fps with a 400 gr bullet with this setup, which would match the 404 Jeffery and the 450-400 NE.
2. Proper bullet choice and placement must be paramount. Proper solids and expanding bullets must be chosen, I personally prefer cutting edge and Alaska Bullet Works (when he was still in business).
3. The shooter must understand the limitations of his chosen tool, which is what all guns are, tools. This will be the biggest deciding factor on how well this individual will perform, as with any setup someone may choose.
Yes, the 45-70 with these modification would be the ideal set-up for someone who wants to hunt with one. As to the original loading of the 45-70, I find them to be anemic when it comes to thick-skinned dangerous game. The primary thing to remember is that bullet placement with a properly designed and constructed bullet is the answer, in any case, to an animal one is hunting or even defending against; whether it be a 22lr or a 700 NE.