Posted on 09/04/2016 5:45:27 PM PDT by w1n1
Despite hitting harder than the .357 Magnum (with a bigger bore), and shooting flatter (to a slight degree) with less recoil than the .44 Magnum, the .41 Remington Magnum has been unfairly overshadowed since hitting the American landscape back in 1964. But the truth is, it just might be the best of a pretty good bunch.
Lets be honest. The .44 Magnum is a fraud, being a .429 in true caliber, while the .41 Magnum is the real McCoy. With comparable loads, the .41 Magnum can do anything the .44 Magnum can do, and it is a real survivor.
The popularity of the .41-caliber Magnum seems to ebb and flow, but those who have stuck with it make it as versatile a choice as its siblings. Ive carried the .41 Magnum for personal protection, killed a couple of deer with it, shot long-range targets (its a favorite among silhouette shooters) and had it in the backcountry as a utility gun. Read the rest of the story here.
Got a Unique load worked up for the same projectile, just too lazy to look it up right now.
L
For really hard hitting loads, it seems that the slower burning powders like 2400 or even WW296/H110 are preferred, but it's the lighter loads of fast burning powders that make for very pleasant shooting loads.
I don't recall the exact load, but when I was competing in "pin-shooting," a typical load was about 7.5 gr of WW231 and a hard-cast 240gr LSWC. IIRC, it sent the bullet lumbering down range at about 750-800fps, a great speed to cleanly take the pin off the table and embed the bullet in the pin, so it won't ricochet back at you.
Mark
Never did take a liking to that huge beast, the Sup Blackhawk was much more fun to shoot. The DA on the Sup Redhawk sucked, so it was a single action for my shooting.
One memorable day, I out shot my buddy with a 30-30 rifle with the Super Blackhawk, standing. Yes, the .44 Sup Blackhawk takes some intense mental discipline to shoot well, but by God, it does shoot more accurately than I could ever explain for a revolver.
Thanks for setting me straight on that!
Mark
Not a lot of fun to shoot, but quite entertaining for those watching!
At the time I had a 629 Power Grand Master (for pin shooting,) and I would NEVER use it for those rounds. Strictly Redhawk rounds, as far as I was concerned!
Mark
In the film I remember ‘Harry’ saying he used light custom loads in his hand cannon.
The old heavy loadings from the early days of the .357 will wake a guy up. I got used to "box store" factory .357 ammunition when used in medium-to-heavy revolvers, but genuinely stout .357 loads launched from - just for example - a 6" GP-100 are not particularly enjoyable for me these days, though I will still politely shoot about any handgun if someone insists that I try their latest cannon (if it is really unpleasant, I just play the old codger card after the first round by handing it back and doing the "aw, shucks... that really kicks" thing).
Mr. niteowl77
My "standard" load is 240 gr. JHP/JSP over 24 gr. of H110. Accurate and powerful (killed a ~300 lb black bear with it).
That load shows pressure signs in my buddies Super Blackhawk. Works fine in two DA wheelguns I've used it in.
Sad tale Sargent,
How about a New love?
Ruger Match Champion??
I’m loving It,
Just Saying.
In practical reality, aren't most defensive uses of a handgun at much closer quarters than 100 meters?
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