African Hunter Published Books Hunter's Guide | Classic African Cartridges | Page 9

Foreword Since the invention of the metallic cartridges for breech loading rifles, a handful of cartridges have become true African classics. Rather than any theoretical calculations, armchair discussions or marketeering hype, the American .45-70, 30-30 Winchester .30-06 Springfield are cartridges which have earned their reputation by putting food on the table and tusks in the warehouse. Some cartridges just seem to get the job done with no fuss, no terse arguments over whether they are “over-kill” or too light for some game, and often very few pet theories as to why they are so great. Rifles chambered for these cartridges are most likely to be found in the hands of a man who actually needs a rifle to earn a living, protect himself or indeed put food on the table, rather than the once a year “sport hunter” who needs all the help (in the form of reduced recoil or longer range or greater “killing power”) that he can get. Like the American .30-30, some of the cartridges were “made” by the rifles that chamber them. The little Mannlicher carbines are still the sweetest handling bolt actions rifles I have ever used, and this more than makes up for the slight deficiencies or inefficiencies in the cartridges chambered in them. Others earned their place as classics on their own merit. Some “on paper” great cartridges were damned by the poor quality bullets available. Principle amongst these is the .303 British. The slick handling civilian and military carbines and “sporterised” military rifles based on the basic Lee Enfield abounded. The rifles were very cheap, reliable and blessed with the fastest-to-operate bolt system ever produced (British troops armed with Lee Enfields comfortably held their own in rapid fire and accuracy events against American troops armed with semi-automatic Garand rifles right through the Second World War). In itself, the cartridge was a good design for its day, but it was designed specifically for people-sized targets and consequently while the .303 has killed more game than any other cartridge in Africa, it has also wounded more (this distinction has now probably been taken over by the Russian 7.62x39 round). Others like the .333 vii i