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Peruvian Mausers: 1891 and 1909

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11 Top Hunting Rifles Chambered in .350 Legend By Payton Miller

Hunters are seeing an explosion of rifle models chambered in .350 Legend now that more states have lifted bans on centerfire deer hunting. Here’s a sampling of offerings from most to least expensive.

Several states that had previously not allowed centerfire rifles for deer now permit straight-wall cartridges. Thus, the .350 Legend, introduced in 2019, now has a serious foothold in market—and the rifle models to prove it. It’s tailor-made for light, handy and relatively inexpensive bolt actions, yet is comparatively kind recoil-wise—at least in contrast to the straight-wall rounds such as the .45-70, .444 Marlin, .450 Bushmaster and .458 SOCOM. A typical factory loading—featuring 160- to 180-grain bullets at 2,100 to 2,300 fps—provides plenty of steam for whitetail out to 250 yards.

It’s caught on quickly after three years on the market, and a burgeoning number of rifles chambered to it attest to the fact that several mainstream companies are convinced enough to believe the .350 Legend has the legs to justify chambering so many models for it in such a relatively short time. Here’s a sampling of what’s out there, presented from least expensive to most expensive.

1. Mossberg Super Bantam Scoped Combo

11 Top Hunting Rifles Chambered in .350 Legend

Mossberg’s Patriot Youth Super Bantam scoped combo has a removable spacer in the black synthetic stock so you can change length of pull as the youngster grows.

The .350 Legend is a great choice for young hunters because of its low recoil, and Mossberg’s entry-level package gun has a removable spacer in the black synthetic stock so you can change length of pull as the youngster grows. Plus it comes with a 3-9×40 variable scope mounted in Weaver bases, so you don’t have to go hunting for an optic. The Bantam model sports the same 22-inch fluted barrel and spiral-fluted bolt as the standard model, and it also incorporates the excellent Lightning Bolt Action trigger that’s user-adjustable from two to seven pounds. It feeds from a four-round detachable box magazine. $483, Mossberg.com


2. Savage Axis XP Camo

11 Top Hunting Rifles Chambered in .350 Legend
The Savage Axis XP comes with a factory-mounted and bore-sighted Weaver 3-9x40mm scope.

The Axis XP is a .350 Legend that won’t break the bank—a great deal since it comes with a factory-mounted and bore-sighted Weaver 3-9x40mm scope. The 22-inch button-rifled barrel is finished in matte blue, and the stock features a good-looking camo pattern. The rifle feeds from a four-round detachable box magazine. Weight is 6.9 pounds. $509, SavageArms.com


3. Henry H015

11 Top Hunting Rifles Chambered in .350 Legend

Available with a matte steel or highly polished brass frame, this simple yet elegant platform for the .350 Legend features a fully adjustable folding leaf rear sight and brass bead front and are drilled and tapped for scope mounts. The matte steel model features a pistol grip walnut stock and rubber recoil pad. The brass model features a straight wrist. The barrel length is 22 inches. The H015 features an external hammer spur, a non-ejecting case extractor, and a locking lever that can be pivoted right or left to break open the action. $552, HenryUSA.com


4. Mossberg Patriot Walnut

11 Top Hunting Rifles Chambered in .350 Legend
The Mossberg Patriot Walnut is a full size, classic-style sporter with button-rifled and free-floated 22-inch barrel and LBA trigger.

This full-size, classic-style sporter is now chambered in .350 Legend. It’s a good-looking rifle, with walnut stock and a fluted 22-inch barrel as well as a spiral fluted bolt. But it’s not just looks. The barrel is button-rifled and free-floated with a recessed crown, and the company’s Lightning Bolt Action trigger is fantastic, user adjustable from 2 to 7 pounds. The rifle feeds from a four-round detachable box magazine, and Weaver-style bases come with the gun. Weight is seven pounds. $559, Mossberg.com


5. Howa Mini Action

11 Top Hunting Rifles Chambered in .350 Legend
Howa’s Mini Action has a 12 percent shorter action than standard short action and has a cold-hammer-forged 16.25-inch threaded barrel and pillar-bedded stock.

The Mini Action, which is imported from Japan by Legacy Sports, has an action that’s 12 percent shorter than the company’s standard short action. It has cold-hammer-forged 16.25-inch threaded barrel and a synthetic pillar-bedded stock in black, OD green or Kryptek Highlander camo. Overall length is 35.75 inches, and weight is 5.8 pounds. Available with or without a Nikko Stirling scope. starting at $559, HowaUSA.com

 


6. CVA Cascade

11 Top Hunting Rifles Chambered in .350 Legend
The CVA Cascade has a 22-inch barrel that’s threaded 5/8×24. The bolt has a 70-degree throw.

Long associated with single-shot rifles and muzzleloaders, CVA has introduced its first bolt-action centerfire—and in.350 Legend no less. It features a 22-inch barrel in matte blue or flat dark earth Cerakote, and it’s threaded 5/8×24. The bolt has a 70-degree throw, and the rifle has a two-position safety. The Veil Wideland synthetic stock has a Soft Touch finish and is adjustable for length of pull. Those who like shooting with bipods will appreciate the dual front swivel studs. The Cascade is compatible with Savage 110 scope bases, and two-piece Weaver bases ship with the rifle. The rifle feeds from a flush-fit detachable magazine. $658, CVA.com


7. Savage 110 Hog Hunter

11 Top Hunting Rifles Chambered in .350 Legend
The Savage 110 Hog Hunter’s stock is adjustable, and the 18-inch medium-contour barrel is threaded and features iron sights.

Built on the famed 110 action, the Hog Hunter allows you to adjust length of pull to fit the shooter, and it comes standard with Savage’s excellent AccuTrigger. The short 18-inch medium-contour barrel is threaded for a suppressor and comes with a thread cap. Unlike other bolt actions in this list, the Hog Hunter comes with iron sights, and of course it’s drilled and tapped for a scope as well. The oversize bolt handle is built for fast follow-up shots, and the stock is a handsome OD green synthetic. The rifle feeds from a four-round detachable box magazine. Weight is right at 7 pounds. $669, SavageArms.com

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Inside The US Factory Making Ukraine’s Most Important Ammo

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Elephant Rifle Annihilates Ballistic Gel at 82,000FPS – The Slow Mo Guys w/ KentuckyBallistics

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The .38 Special: History & Performance The .38 Spl. is nothing if not versatile. by DAVE CAMPBELL

38 Special History Performance 1920X1080

Many don’t realize it, but the double-action revolver dates back to the mid-19th century. One of the earliest was an English creation from the company of Deane and Adams, and was a .456-cal., five-shot cap-and-ball revolver. In America, Ebanezer Townsend Starr designed a .44-cal. double-action percussion revolver with a six-shot cylinder around 1856 and began producing it commercially in 1858, just in time to have it be a part of the American Civil War. When Rollin White patented the bore-through cylinder in April 1855, the concept of a repeating cartridge revolver would soon be combined with a trigger-cocking design that would be the foundation of revolvers to this day.

White—who once had been employed by Colt and had developed his bored-through patent while there—took that patent and several others with him when he parted company with Colt, eventually working out a deal with Smith & Wesson, which had been dabbling with the double-action revolver concept as early as 1872 in some top-break revolvers. Those early efforts had some problems—as do nearly all early designs. Single-action revolvers declined in popularity, the favor went to Colt’s 1878 double-action design and Forehand & Wadsworth double-action, top-break revolvers, which have a more-than-casual resemblance to Smith & Wesson top-breaks. In 1879, James H. Bullard worked up a break-top, double-action revolver design, first a .32-caliber, and later that year a .38-cal. design with a cartridge that became the .38 S&W.

Ammunition comparison side by side picket fence three vertical bullets

Shown (l. to r.): .38 S&W, .38 Spl. and .357 Mag. Image courtesy of author.

Like many firearms’ designs, the first efforts are for lower-powered cartridges in order to get the bugs and manufacturing mechanics worked out, but soon, the demand came for more power. Colt had less-than-acceptable results with its .38 Long Colt cartridge. However, Colt did have a superior—read stronger—design with its solid-frame, swing-out cylinder double action. Smith & Wesson started developing a solid-frame revolver in 1894 dubbed the Hand Ejector, the first of which were chambered in .32 S&W Long and .38 S&W.

Yielding to the demand for more power, Smith & Wesson beefed up and improved its solid-frame revolver it developed into the K-frame in 1899. It was called the Military and Police (M&P) model and was available in .32-20 Winchester Center Fire (WCF) and a new cartridge—designed in 1898—known as the .38 Smith & Wesson Special. Both the revolver and its .38-cal. cartridge would rock the handgun realm worldwide. It is, in a word, ubiquitous.

The .38 Special (Spl.) is dimensionally identical to the .38 Long Colt except for length; the .38 Spl. is 0.529″ longer. Too, the .38 Long Colt is derived from the .38 Short Colt, thereby meaning both of the Colt cartridges can be safely fired in a .38 Spl.-chambered firearm. Initially, the .38 Spl. was loaded with 21 grains of blackpowder for a velocity of 775 f.p.s. with a 158-grain lead, round-nose bullet, however, within a year, smokeless powder loads became available.

In 1900, the navy ordered 1,000 M&P revolvers, and the following year, the army did the same. Police departments and target shooters flocked to the M&P revolvers. Colt began chambering its revolvers to .38 Spl. in 1907 with the Police Positive. Just about every manufacturer making revolvers has made or is building .38 Spl. revolvers.

Barrel lengths run from 1 3/4″ in snubby revolvers to 10″ as the one used in the first-generation Thompson/Center Contender single-shot pistol. Profiles run from pencil-thin, straw-like tubes to massive barrels an inch or more in diameter. The fat barrels are most often custom jobs installed on dedicated target guns. The .38 Spl. made its way into the chambers of derringers and even a semi-automatic target pistol.

Smith & Wessob Model 52 right-side view semi-automatic pistol handgun metal wood

Interestingly, Smith & Wesson made a semi-automatic pistol for use with wadcutter bullets that had a frame based upon its Model 39 but was chambered for .38 Spl. from 1961 to 1993. The Model 52 was expensive to build because of the hand-fitting necessary to guarantee a five-shot group at 50 yards that was 2″ or less. Known also as the 38 Master, the Model 52 garnered a lot of championships in competitive bullseye shooting.

Colt also ventured into the wadcutter semi-auto market with its Gold Cup National Match .38 Spl. Mid Range based upon—not surprisingly—its M1911 pistol from 1960 to 1974. Just for grins, I looked up what these two competing semi-autos bring on the current market. Count on a Model 52 to clear $1,500 or so out of your pocket at the time of this writing, and the Colt is bringing $2,500 to $3,500 at the gun auctions.

The .38 Spl. is nothing if not versatile. Bullet weights for factory ammo range from the 90-grain Super Vel Super Snub to the old Winchester Super Police load featuring a 200 grain full-metal-jacket bullet. As a comparison, the Super Vel bullet comes screaming out of a 1 5/8″ barrel Smith & Wesson at 1,300 to 1,350 f.p.s. Out of a 4″ service revolver, it’s headed downrange at 1,530 f.p.s. The Super Police load was discontinued in the early 1980s, so no velocity quotes were available, but you can certainly figure a bullet twice as heavy as the Super Sub will be loafing along at a much slower pace.

Western Super Match yellow ammunition box text on box mid-range match ammunition wadcutter bullet .38 Special History And Perfornance

Few, if any, police departments are using the .38 Spl. today. The various 9 mm Luger pistols have pretty much taken over that market. Nonetheless, many of today’s veteran officers slip a .38 Spl. snubby in a coat pocket for those “just-in-case” moments. Too, many concealed carry packers keep a .38 Spl. revolver handy. For those occasions that warrant it, I often have a Smith & Wesson Model 342PD in a pocket holster. Granted the 342PD is chambered in the big-brother .357 Mag., but I carry is stoked with Speer 135-grain, Gold Dot SB (short barrel) .38 Spl. ammo.

Handloaders can improve on factory loads a bit, but unless you are using it in a .357 Mag.-chambered revolver, it’s best to keep the loads sane. The vast majority of my loading experience with the .38 Spl. is in loading wadcutters for practice. In the last half century, I’ve probably loaded somewhere close to 50,000 rounds of these paper hole-punchers. I used to run the standard 3.2 grains of Bullseye in back of a 148-grain wadcutter. Now I use 3 grains of Trail Boss.

There have been literally millions of revolvers chambered in .38 Spl. over its 124-year lifespan. Manufacturing continues to this day from cheap to opulent. The first handgun many of us—including me—ever shot was a .38 Spl. I can’t imagine being without a few of them.

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THE .44 RUSKIE WRITTEN BY MIKE “DUKE” VENTURINO

This is Duke’s Navy Arms 3rd Model .44 Russian. He did not even
consider selling it during Duke’s Great Gun Sale in 2008.

 

After writing a feature recently on why the .44 S&W Special isn’t so special, now I’m going to detail why I do like its ballistic twin, the .44 S&W Russian. At least I like it in this one particular revolver. That’s the Navy Arms’ replica of Smith & Wesson’s Model #3, 3rd Model .44 Russian.

Circa 1872 the Russian Government wanted to start buying Smith & Wesson’s new top break Model #3 revolvers. Very important to the company was the fact they were willing to pay in gold. But the Russians wanted nothing to do with Smith & Wesson’s own .44/100 cartridge because it used a heel-type bullet. That’s where a reduced diameter shank fits inside the cartridge case while the full diameter of the bullet is the same as the outside of the cartridge case. Just look at a round of .22 Long Rifle. They’re still made that way. The Russians explained if the bullet fit inside the cartridge case with revolver chambers bored accordingly things would work much better. They certainly did, and still do. Of course with all that gold in the balance Smith & Wesson said, “you bet!”

The result was the .44 S&W Russian. Smith & Wesson’s own cartridge then gained the name of .44 S&W American. Case length for the Ruskie one was set at .97″ with bullet diameter at .429″. Through the decades the .44 S&W Russian was loaded with bullets as heavy as 275 grains over black powder charges as heavy as 23 grains. By the smokeless powder era in the early 1900s, factory loads were standardized with a 246-grain roundnose bullet at about 755 fps. And when the .44 S&W Special came along in 1908 it was given the exact same bullet at the exact same speed but in a case 1.16″ long.

 

Why the odd hook on the trigger guard?

Picky Russians

 

In its first 30 years of existence the .44 Russian cartridge gained a superb reputation for accuracy, of course as fired in the several versions of Smith & Wesson top break revolvers. It’s recorded some notable handgun target shots were able to keep five .44 Russian bullets inside a 3″ circle at 50 yards. That’s probably true, and it should be emphasized not many handguns made today will do that even with smokeless propellants.

Between 1872 and 1874 the Smith & Wesson Model #3 went through three revisions as requested by the Russians. Collectors named them 1st, 2nd and 3rd Models. With each, the Russians asked for design changes altering the Model #3’s appearance so much the company started to grouse — despite the gold.

By the 3rd Model .44 Russian, the S&W Model #3 had a “knuckle” at the top of the grip resulting in a saw-handle shaped grip frame, and that odd spur hanging off the trigger guard. Many theories have been thrown out as to the purpose for the spur. The most likely one is Russian Cavalry tactics called for horse mounted troopers to charge with their revolvers cocked and with the trigger finger resting on the spur. That likely saved a lot of horses from being shot in the back of the head as Lt. Col. George A. Custer did to his own horse once when chasing a bison. I’ve found the spur makes a dandy finger rest for two-handed shooting and the saw handle grip keeps the hand positioned on the revolver exactly the same from shot to shot.

 

Left is Lyman #429478 (200 grains) and at right is Lyman #429383 (248 grains).

Good Guns

 

At one time I owned a sample of each of those vintage S&W .44 Russian revolvers but hardly ever fired them because they were very fragile and also very valuable. So when Navy Arms announced their replica of the 3rd Model .44 Russian about 10 years back, I jumped on it. While it is not an exact clone of the old S&W 3rd Model .44 Russians, it’s not bad, and the differences are minor. The Navy Arms’ version has a 7″ barrel as opposed to the original’s 6½”, and the original had a front sight forged integral with the barrel while the replica’s is pinned on. Oh, and some dimensions are slightly different by a few hundredths of an inch. So what.

My Navy 3rd Model .44 Russian is extremely accurate with either smokeless or black powder loads. I’ve settled on two loads: 248 grain roundnose bullets (Lyman #429383) or 200 grain roundnose bullets (Lyman #329478) over 4.0 grains of Bullseye or 19 grains of Swiss FFFg blackpowder. Its point of impact is about dead on with the latter bullet and about 2″ higher than point of aim at 50 feet with the former. Despite its tiny sights I’ve gotten one hole groups at 50 feet from a sandbag rest, and standing with two hands I can keep dueling tree paddles swinging. It doesn’t gum up with black powder fouling for at least 50 or so rounds.

When I had Duke’s Great Gun Sale in 2008 and disposed of 50 seldom used firearms, all my original S&W .44 Russian revolvers went. Putting the Navy Arms 3rd Model .44 Russian on the auction block was never even considered.

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44 mag,45 Colt,357 mag,44-40,carbines Vs books

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I remember these at a gunshop in Fallbrook California a VERY long time ago!

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