Thursday, May 7, 2020

.350L vs 30-30 vs .357M vs .44M

Let me start out by saying all four of these cartridges are more than capable of killing Whitetail Deer by the truck-load.

I, personally, killed a 140 pound Whitetail with a .357 Magnum. The 158 grain hollowpoint was traveling at a very pedestrian 1100 fps at the muzzle and was undoubtedly moving slower when it hit the deer.

The bullet was a pass-through and the deer left a blood trail Stevie Wonder could have followed. It went 200 yards before saying "Good Night".

If a .357 at 1100fps can do it, any of the candidates can kill deer when fired out of a rifle with appropriate projectiles.

If you already have a rifle in 30-30, .357 or .44, then dance with the one that you have.

First, you have to hit the target

Trajectories of all four candidates are similar. The .44 Magnum is the outlier because I used 265 grain bullets for this simulation. There are lighter bullets that can be used that would make the trajectory indistinguishable from the others.

Then the bullet has to do its job
The bullets used in this simulation were the 265 grain FTX for the .44 Magnum with a ballistic coefficient of .225 and initial velocity of 1600 fps, the .350L with 165 grain FTX and an initial velocity of 2100 fps, the 30-30 with a 170 grain flat point and the .357 with the 140 grain FTX at 2000 fps.

This is where the .357 Magnum, with the bullet chosen, runs into trouble. The 140 FTX is marketed as a handgun bullet and would likely disintegrate upon impact at close ranges. Hits in the ribs would result in spectacular wounds. Hits in the shoulder or above the ribs would result in wounds that were not immediately fatal.

Ammo availability
The other three candidates beat the .350 Legend six ways to Sunday.

Cross-platform capabilities
The  other three candidates are widely available in bolt, lever and single-shot actions.

The .350 Legend and his big brother the .450 Bushmaster are available in bolt action rifles and modern sporting rifles.

Kids
Kids love those modern sporting rifles. If I were a betting man, then I would bet that Kubota and Bella will be buying a modern sporting rifle in .350 Legend or .450 Bushmaster when their finances allow.

Meanwhile, I will be training the grand-kids if/when. Muzzle-loaders and single-shots are great for training young hunters to not spray-and-pray. Bolt action rifles are next. The .350 Legend doesn't have much recoil.

That makes the .350 Legend a promising choice for new hunters and old guys who don't need lots of recoil to prove they are a man.

That ammo availability thing...
Will it be a fizzle? Easily, three-quarters of new entries to the market are fizzles. How do you justify an Magnum in .323" when it is bracketed with a half-dozen Magnums in .308" and three more in .338"? And, in the final analysis, what can any of those Magnums do that the 30-06 cannot do with modern powders and projectiles (.338 Lapua Magnum excepted)

The ecological niche that the .350 Legend is pushing its way into is almost unpopulated. The .30 Carbine is not legal in Michigan (and several other states) because it is too skinny. As noted earlier, the only other entries are .450 BM, .44 Mag and .357 Mag

Unless the laws in the mid-Western states change to allow centerfire cartridges with shoulders, I think there is a better-than-50% chance the .350 Legend will hang on.

5 comments:

  1. If you reload you can push a bit higher velocities in .357 in a rifle. I'm talking a 158 grain HP at better than 1600 FPS in a rifle barrel. Still not as good as the other rifle rounds, but a lot more smack at 70-100 yards.

    Email me for details, I'd rather not post them on a public forum.

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  2. Here in pueblo they have a white tail elimination hunt, shotguns only. I tried practicing with 12ga slugs and couldn't because the recoil. Walmart had a clearance sale on savage 220 for under 300$. 20ga is just fine on recoil, and the slug went thru the doe I shot.

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    1. I think the 20ga slugs are a lot more shootable than the 12ga, but if you want the range/oomph try a semi-auto 12 or pump with a wood stock and an improved trigger. My 12ga has an absolutely horrendous trigger on it, and I think the long pull and high weight really make you dread the recoil more than a moderate pull and moderate weight when shooting slow.

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  3. Thank you for this information, and your reply to my comment in the previous .350 Legend post.

    If the scale tip in favor of the cartridge, then manufacturers will begin to support it.

    I did see that there are very heavy subsonic loads being made for the .359 Legend.

    It's something to keep on eye on.

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    Replies
    1. Sigh. The last mention should read ".350" and not ".359".

      Delete

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