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CURRENT OFFERINGS DOC'S BOOKS &ARTICLES The White Muzzleloading System Green River RifleWorks K-Series Rifles Tominator Shotgun- BG Series Sporting Rifle AVAILABLE ON CUSTOM ORDER
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BEST LOADS IN WHITE RIFLES
A "Best Load" is an entirely subjective matter. Its determination largely depends on the needs and whims of a particular shooter. So the information that follows constitutes my personal opinion as to what is a "Best Load". It may differ substantially from yours. The loads I am interested in are those that are safe for the rifle and system they are used in, are easy to perform, meaning that they are quick to load and get ready to fire, are as accurate as needed for the game hunted, and powerful enough that they will penetrate and kill game animals by multi-system tissue destruction without problem. I want my chosen target animal to die suddenly, without time to escape or turn on me, or even think about it. I have chosen loads that are accurate, are easy to clean up after, deposit minimal amounts of lead or plastic in the barrel, don’t kick too hard or foul the barrel badly and are effective at 100-200 yards range on deer-size or larger big game. All the loads quoted were fired in either David White’s or my personal White rifles. Don’t attempt to duplicate them in any other brand rifle. The manufacturer’s suggestions should be followed if you are shooting a rifle other than a White. Also, keep in mind that not all rifles shoot alike, even when in the same caliber and when carefully made by the same manufacturer. What worked well for me in my rifle may not work quite that well in your rifle. You still have the obligation to test your own rifle and find the Best Load for the conditions in which you expect to hunt. What I recommend is only a good place to start. The reader is going to have to decide for himself what a "Best Load" really is for his particular rifle and purpose. There’s only one way to do this. Get a rifle, a supply of bullets and powder and determine for yourself what your "Best Load" is. Every shooter should shoot as much as he can because it is the only way to truly become familiar with the rifle and the White Muzzleloading System, let alone develop a "Best Load." So the byword is Shoot,Shoot,Shoot. CALIBER AND WEIGHT NOTATION Please note that SuperSlug and PowerPunch calibers and bullet weights are listed with a THREE DIGIT notation of diameter of bullet, then a forward slash, then bullet weight in grains, then the title of the bullet. For example, the .450 caliber Power-Punch bullet weighing 460 grains lists as .450/460 PowerPunch. The SuperSlugs of yesteryear are the PowerPunch of today. White designed BuckBusters are listed in a similar fashion. The bullet diameter is listed with TWO DIGITS, followed by a dash, then the bullet weight in grains followed by the title.. This differentiates the BuckBuster from the SuperSlug and PowerPunch line. Example; the 45 caliber BuckBuster weighing 360 grains, will be listed as 45-360 BuckBuster In contrast, White SuperSabots with ShootingStar or PowerStar bullets are listed with a TWO DIGIT notation of nominal caliber of sabot, then a forward slash followed by a TWO DIGIT notation of bullet diameter, followed by a dash and finally the bullet weight and title. For example, the 50 caliber SuperSabot with 45 caliber PowerStar hollow point bullet weighing 435 grains is listed as 50/45-435 PowerStar. 330/240 SuperSlug (BC= .36)
So far this is an experimental caliber and bullet, included to whet the appetite of muzzleloading experimenters. My Super 91 rifle sports a barrel with groove depth at .338 and land-to-land diameter of .331. Twist is 1-14. The bullet weighs 240 grains in pure lead and is very quick to 200 yards with 60 grains of Pyrodex P. In fact, the bullet hits at 200 yards before recoil kicks the rifle out of the way. It’s also very accurate, printing a 4 inch group at 175 yards shot informally over the hood of my truck with a low power scope. The only game I’ve taken with it so far is a big 300 lb. Sika deer and several Bobcat and varmints. The damage the bullet did with a 60 yard shot on the deer was phenomenal. It blew the atria off the heart, blew up the lungs and exploded the liver. It caused far more damage than normally expected from such a small caliber bullet. I feel that the caliber holds great promise. It’s at least as good as the old 32/40 rifle cartridge, which was a favorite in past years, as it throws a heavier bullet at even higher velocities. There’s no reason to believe that the fine cartridges and bullets of yesteryear will not eventually be duplicated by the muzzeloaders of today. The ballistics of the 32/40 Black Powder cartridge are duplicated, if not bettered, by the 330/240 SuperSlug. Our next two bullets shown, the 350/280 and the 376/320, better the ballistics of the venerated 38/55, with even heavier bullets and higher velocities.
.350/280 SuperSlug (BC= .34) This caliber and bullet are also experimental at this point in time. My Super 91 rifle throws a 280 grain bullet sized at .350 out of a barrel with groove diameter at .358 and land diameter at .351. Twist is 1-14. It shoots a little harder than the.330/240, with its heavier bullet and 70 grain Pyrodex P load. I haven’t used it on game yet, but the bullet is accurate and quick on target.
367/300 SuperSlug (BC= .33) This is also an experimental caliber. It will be very useful as it betters the ballistics of the much loved 38-55 of yesteryear. The bore mikes .368 land-land, with a groove depth of .375. Twist is 1-14. Bullet is cast weighing 300 gr. at .368 diameter, then is sized to .367. It is accurate and hits hard with 80-90 grains Pyrodex P. It’s sure to be a good killer on deer sized game. Recoil is surprisingly mild.
.409/280 SuperSlug (BC= .25)
This relatively light weight bullet is easy to load, is accurate with modest charges of powder in fast twist White rifles and hardly kicks at all. It's very easy on the shoulder. It has been discontinued, I suppose due to slow sales. This is unfortunate because it was a delight to shoot, a great plinker.
Ballistic Chart of 409/280 SuperSlug, 80 grains Pyrodex-P showing energy dispersion curve. Note that 150 yard energy is about 850 ft. lbs.
409/320 SuperSlug (BC= .30)
This is a discontinued bullet once produced for the .410 caliber. It was a deadly killer on deer-sized game. I watched my lawyer brother-in-law take a walking mule deer at 200-plus yards using this great bullet in the fall of 1992. He was using peep sights, shooting 80 grains Pyrodex P. He shoots fist-sized groups at 100 yards with this combination. He claims to be no great shot. As the fast 1-16 twist in his Super 91 does best with middle power loads, his 80 gr. Pyrodex charge was probably about perfect. He reported mild recoil. Velocities were excellent, with the 80 gr. load producing 1417 fps at the muzzle and 1119 fps and 890 ft lbs of energy at 200 yards. the deer was heart shot, bucked and kicked and ran a few steps then went down.
409/400 PowerPunch (BC= .32)
A fantastic bullet in White barrels. Probably the most accurate bullet and barrel combination currently produced. I’ve shot 6 inch groups at 400 yards with this bullet in a White GR Series Sporting Rifle using a tall vernier tang peep and 70 gr. of Pyrodex P. My best hunting load has been 90 gr. Pyrodex P. Muzzle velocity with the 90 gr. load is in the 1313 FPS range with 100 and 200 yard energies of 1273 ft. lbs. and 1088 ft. lbs., respectively. BC is White’s next to highest at .32. I’ve taken antelope, deer and elk with this caliber. It’s excellent for all but the heaviest and hardiest American game.
My young friend Aaron used this bullet with 90 grains of Pyrodex P to harvest the good Sika buck in the photo above in the fall of 1995. The well aimed bullet took off the top of the heart and went all the way through side to side. There’s no reason for anyone to hesitate using this fine caliber on deer or elk-sized game. It’s also the best bullet for long range target shooting made, proving to be a "killer" on the steel silhouette range.
45-360 BuckBuster (BC= .22)
This was a short, light-weight bullet once produced for any maker’s rifle or pistol. It’s no longer cataloged, which is unfortunate because it was especially good in White’s two handed Javelina pistol as well as competing rifles and pistols. Its channelures are fewer, wider and deeper than those in Super-Slugs or PowerPunch bullets to hold more PowerLube and upset better in the deeper grooves and slower twists found in CVA, Thompson-Center, Traditions, Knight, Remington, Ruger and other high quality competing muzzleloader’s barrels. It’s best used with rifling twists of 1-32 to 1-48. White’s 1-20 twist demands a lighter load for best accuracy. I’ve found 60 gr. Pyrodex-P in the White-designed Javelina pistol, Whitetail, Bison, and the MTI Models 97 and 98 rifles to be an excellent load for deer sized game. An 80-90 grain load works well in 45 caliber T/C rifles, as well as other competing rifles with deeper grooves and slower twists. It was an excellent bullet for less than 150 yard deer hunting as it is capable of excellent velocities with top loads in slower twist rifles.
I used a load of 60 grains Pyrodex P in the then new White Javelina two-handed pistol with the 360 grain .45 caliber Buck-Buster to take a nice Javelina in the fall of 1995. Range was about 60 yards. The hit was through the heart and lung and the Javelina traveled less than 40 yards at a dead run then collapsed. The bullet went all the way through with a good 2 inch exit hole in the opposite ribs. I have used as much as 90 grains of Pyrodex P in the .45 caliber Javelina pistol with good success. Recoil is substantial, but is nicely taken up by the sling and two hand hold. What I like best is the lack of punch in the face: no buttstock-no punch in the shoulder or face. .450/400 PowerPunch (BC= .26)
An excellent bullet capable of 1550 fps velocities with top loads in White rifles. I managed to kill the prettiest Mouflon sheep in the world (not the biggest, but close) with this bullet and 80 gr. Pyrodex P in my Razor-Back folding-stock rifle. I took the shot near offhand, leaning against a tree, almost in the dark and steeply downhill through the Missouri hardwoods at nearly 100 yards for instant knockdown.
The prettiest Mouflon I’ve ever seen and the RazorBack folding-stock rifle.
My favorite load duplicates the ballistics of the old 45/70 sporting load, i.e.- 80 grains equivalent Pyrodex P for 1315 FPS and 1536 ft. lbs. energy at the muzzle. There’s 1238 ft. lbs. of energy at 100 yards and 1043 at 200. Lots of big game have been killed with this load. It’s just as good now as it was way back then. .450/460 PowerPunch (BC= .30 )
The most popular .450 caliber bullet White currently produces. This is deservedly so as its performance is hard to beat. It hits awfully hard yet recoil isn’t severe. Velocities are achievable in the 1500 fps range. The most popular load among the shooters I know is 80-100 grains Pyrodex P with 90 gr. being the most popular. I like that combination, too. I’ve shot numerous near inch 100 yard groups with the 90 gr. load. It comes highly recommended.
My favorite 90 grain load produces 1276 fps at the muzzle with 1663 ft. lbs. of energy. If sighted in to hit point of aim at 125 yards, it’s only 3.9 inches high at 75 yds and 4.46 inches low at 150. It has 1377 ft. lbs. of residual energy left at 100 yds. and 1181 ft. lbs. left at 200 yds as well. It’s a good killer on any American game except perhaps the biggest bull moose and the big bears.
450/490 SuperSlug (BC= .32)
The 45/490 SuperSlug and my favorite load of 100 gr. Pyrodex P produces 1286 fps and 1800 ft. lbs. at the muzzle with 100 yard. residuals of 1182 fps and 1522 ft. lbs. Two hundred yard residuals equal 1103 fps and 1323 ft. lbs.
If sighted at 125 yds, the bullet is 3.8 inches high at 75 yds., 10.3 inches low at 175 yds and 17.4 inches low at 200 yds. It’s an excellent load for almost any big game and target shooting at almost any range. If I had to choose just one bullet for a .45 caliber White designed rifle, this is the one I’d pick as the best all-around choice.
450/520 SuperSlug (BC= .33)
This was White’s heaviest & longest bullet in .450 caliber. It had the highest Ballistic Coefficient (BC) of any 45 caliber muzzle-loading bullet made at .33. It was an excellent choice for truly long range shooting, whether at big game at 200 yards or target at 1000 yards. It was an improvement on the classic bullets used in the old 800 yard. Creedmore matches of yesteryear. Muzzle velocities appear to be low for the charge used but the bullet hardly slows down as it flies down range. With my favorite load of 100 gr. Pyrodex, you’ll get 1255 FPS at the muzzle with a fantastic 1352 ft. lbs. of energy left at 200 yds and great accuracy. It’s a good choice for any big game in North America and any horned game in the world.
503/430 SuperSlug (BC= .20)
This was White’s speediest .503 caliber SuperSlug. A max charge of 150 grains Pyrodex P will push it out the muzzle at 1560 fps for fantastic close range, "Express," knock-down power. Its BC was lower than our longer bullets so it slowed down faster but at 200 yards it retained a respectable 1293 ft. lbs. of energy. Its performance is bettered somewhat by the new .503 caliber 440 grain PowerPunch currently available. For all practical purposes, the two can be interchanged, since there is only a 2.3 % weight difference.
Roger sights in his White Whitetail .504 caliber rifle so that it hits 5 inches high between 75 and 100 yards. This puts him on point of aim at 150 yards and 13 inches low at 200. He also claims near minute of angle groups when using a scope. He does have to remember to hold low if the animal is close. A 100 yard shot on a deer means holding just under the brisket for a solid heart hit. A 200 yard shot means holding across the spine to hit the heart. Best, it doesn’t kick too hard at all and it slays like a hammer.
50-460 BuckBuster (BC= .22 ) and the new .503/460 PowerPunch
The BuckBuster is sized at .500 to fit other brand 50 caliber rifles, the PowerPunch is sized to .5035 to slip-fit in White 504 caliber rifles This BuckBuster is as grand a bullet for any .500 caliber muzzle-loading rifle of any brand as the .503/460 PowerPunch is for any .504 caliber White Rifle. Neither can be beat. We sell more of these bullets than all the other bullets listed combined, it's that popular. Both have the advantage of working on White Muzzleloading System principles. You don’t have to pound then down. They slip in with a swoop of the ramrod. The bullet expands on firing, bellying out to fill the rifling and obturate the bore. The BuckBuster’s larger channelures are packed with White’s PowerLube to better fill the deep grooves found on other’s slower twist rifles. The PowerPunch's smaller, shallower grooves work better with White's shallow groove fast twist rifling. Best yet, both have a better Ballistic Coefficient than any competitive bullet (except some others of White’s SuperSlugs, PowerPunch bullets and saboted ShootingStars) plus a better nose shape for quick expansion in game. They’re the best of both worlds. Both are made of Enhanced lead, pure lead with a touch of tin to sharpen up the edges and get it out of the mold without damage, as well as enhance the consistency of casting and sizing If you have a muzzleloading rifle in 50 caliber that isn’t a White, then use the BuckBuster. Just make sure it fits your barrel like it should with 1/1000th inch windage or less between bullet and lands.
My doctor friend Kent smith used this bullet and 80 grains FFg Goex Black Powder in a Thompson Center Renegade on a black bear in British Columbia in 1994. It was down on the shot, and didn’t move six feet. He was absolutely tickled with the bullet’s performance.
And for those of you who worry about the slip-fit bullet falling out of the barrel, he shot the bear almost straight down from a 25-foot high treestand. Long experience has shown that the fouling from a squib load of any of the common muzzle-loading powders is enough to hold the slip-fit bullet in place while hunting. Sight it in at 75 yards for tree stand hunting and it will be 4 inches low at 100 yards with about 1150 ft' lbs. of energy.
503/480 PowerPunch (BC= .25)
I used this bullet in Africa during the African winter of 1994 to harvest a fine zebra stallion at 150 yards. I used 100 grains of PyroP and a Musket cap. The shot took him shoulder on and penetrated all the way to the opposite ribs. He only went about 50 feet, mostly because the bullet took the aorta off the heart. The bullet hit him with 1377 ft. lbs. of energy.
My load was a modest 100 gr. Pyrodex P. I had the rifle sighted in at 125 yards, which puts it 3.5 inches high at 75 yards and 9.9 inches low at 175. Energy at 175 yards is a terrific 1309 ft. lbs. Average group size at 100 yds with peep sights and slow, careful shooting, allowing the barrel to cool a little between shots, had averaged less than two inches, including many shots on many days over the summer. I shot it at least 200 times at close and long ranges getting ready for this hunt.
503/600 POWERPUNCH (BC= .30
My favorite load is 120 gr. Pyrodex P with the base protected by a .50 caliber blue White lubricated wool wad. The wad keeps that hot load from melting the base of the bullet and leading the barrel. Even then, I carefully clean the barrel after each few shots when in the field. I do this with the powder and bullet down but before I cap it again. This technique reduces leading and maintains accuracy for that all important first shot on the next go round. Just be sure you haven’t left a live percussion cap on the nipple.
The biggest moose ever killed with a muzzle-loader, with my personal Super 91, on video, using the 600 grain PowerPunch bullet. Can you imagine, I lend my personal rifle to a guy and he kills the biggest moose in the world with it! Where was I that day?
This load kicks like a magnum, so you’ll want to hold the gun tight when you shoot it. If you have a scope on the gun, watch your forehead. I have a scar between the eyes from a hurried shot on a Kodiak bear using this great bullet and 140 grains black powder, plus a scope that was a fraction too close..
A quick check on the ballistics tables below will show you a 1265 FPS muzzle velocity with 2132 ft. lbs. of muzzle energy with the 120 grain Pyrodex P load. Residual 100 yard energy is 1780 ft. lbs. while residual 200 yard energy is still a hefty 1539 ft. lbs. Save this bullet for the heaviest game, or the heaviest brush or the heaviest wind. Think heavy when you use it.
54-450 BUCKBUSTER (BC= .18 ) (The new .539/430 PowerPunch comes close)
The proof of the pudding is a 150 plus point whitetail that I shot with Roger Raglin on video, some years ago, at about 20 yards. We were hiding a in a plastic stump, one of the best blinds I’ve ever used. The bullet, fired over 80 grains of Pyrodex P in a White Bison rifle, blew the whitetail sideways and piled him up, all 4 feet in the air. Big bullets do their job, even with what you might think of as a light load.
I don’t have any formal ballistics for this bullet yet, but it’s a good one. Follow your manufacturer’s directions on powder charges if you use it in a rifle not a White. .54-535 BuckBuster (BC= .22 )
When I designed this .54 caliber bullet, I did it as a sop to those who just had to have a 54 caliber rifle. Since then, though, I’ve gained great respect for it. It’s accurate and hits Hard, with a capital H. My favorite hunting load with the 54-535 in the .54 caliber heavy barreled White Grand Alaskan is 120 gr. PyrodexP, which produces a muzzle velocity of 1405 FPS with muzzle energy of 2426 ft. lbs. If you use this big bullet in a rifle not a White, be sure to follow your manufacturer’s recommendations on powder charges. They will probably be substantially different than those we suggest for White rifles.
If sighted in at 100 yards with the 100 grain load, the big 545 grain bullet will rise only 2.5 inches at 50 yards, and fall to 3.7 inches below point of aim at 125 yards. It will be 16.5 inches low at 175 yards with plenty of energy left for big deer or elk.
In T/C and other rifles, which might not be quite so sturdy as White’s Bison or Grand Alaskan, back down to 100 gr. Pyrodex. Even the 100 grain loading in a TC rifle produces 1306 FPS and 2065 ft. lbs. of energy at the muzzle. Residual energies with the same 100 grain load at 100 and 150 yards equal 1583 and 1472 ft. lbs., respectively, more than enough for quick kills in big game.
539/750 SuperSlug (BC= 26 )
Because of its success, White once produced a Grand Alaskan rifle, based on the W-series, ( same as the Super 91 & M 98), but with a heavy, only slightly tapered 24 inch barrel. The rifle turned out to be super accurate with the big bullet over 200 grains PyrodexP ignited by a musket cap. .
Velocity/Energy/Bullet pths of 539/750
SuperSlug over 180 grains Pyro-P ignited by 10 grains fffg Black Powder, fired
from a 24 inch barreled Grand Alaskan.
To say the least, the big bullet is potent, with the 190 gr. load above producing 1401 FPS at the muzzle with 3270 ft. lbs. of energy. At 200 yards, velocity has fallen to 1156 fps but energy remains a phenominal 2225 ft. lbs.
Recoil is substantial but tolerable in a 12 lb. rifle, (which is what both the custom double and the grqnd alaskan weigh). Accuracy in my prototype Grand Alaskan rifle is phenomenally good with frequent cloverleaf groups at 100 yards. Penetration on a big cape buffalo, fired through the solid ball joint of the shoulder, then shoulder blade, than a rib, with the custom double, extended to, but not through, the opposite ribs.
54/50-500 PowerStar (BC= .24 ) The .54 SuperSabot with .50 caliber PowerStar bullet never did come into production. The PowerStar had already proven itself in the 50/45-435 and 45/40-350 calibers. The prototypes had a boat-tail base and ogival nose for enhanced flight characteristics with a hollow point that made it a fast expander in big game animals like caribou and elk. It was long and relatively heavy for its length, with a high ballistic coefficient and fantastic retained energy. Everything that can be said for he PowerStar in 45/40-350 or 50/45-435 caliber could be said in spades for the 54/50-500 caliber. The 54/50-500 caliber PowerStar looked like the 45/40 and 50/45 caliber White saboted bullets, except for the larger caliber. You were supposed to fill its patented lubrication grooves with White PowerLube before you loaded it.
The pre-production 54/50-500 PowerStar not only performed beautifully in the White line of rifles but also in other’s true .540 caliber rifles, with lesser charges. It also worked on White Muzzleloading System principles. It loaded a tiny bit harder than a SuperSlug or PowerPunch as there is .001 interference fit. The Enhanced lead PowerStar bullet expands into the sabot on firing, just like a SuperSlug or Power-Punch, bellying the plastic sabot into the rifling. This made it accurate with terrific down range performance.
50/45-435 ShootingStar & PowerStar (BC= .26 )
This is no short pistol bullet. It’s a saboted rifle bullet that works on White Shooting System principles, engraving the sabot into the rifling after bellying up, forcing the plastic of the sabot into the grooves as it’s fired. It’s a slight interference fit so loads somewhat harder than SuperSlugs, PowerPunch or BuckBusters but loads a lot easier than other sabot/bullet combinations. You won’t need a short starter or a hammer to get it down the barrel and you won’t have to pound on your ramrod with a rock.. You will want a White’s PowerStar Loading Tip so the nose of the bullet doesn’t get deformed during ramming. You will also want a tin of PowerLube, which was specifically developed for White bullets and the SuperSabot. Don’t lube the bullet, lube the sabot. Fill the channelures in the base. My favorite load is 120 gr. of Pyrodex P, which produces muzzle velocities of 1393 fps and muzzle energies of 1875 ft. lbs. Best yet, the bullet is super accurate and retains energy well. BC is right up there with the best of the SuperSlugs or PowerPunch bullets yet muzzle velocity can be higher because of its relatively light weight. Velocity and energy at 200 yards are fantastic 1145 FPS and 1268 ft. lbs with the 120 grain charge.
I used this combination on Mountain Caribou in the Northwest Territories of Canada in the fall of ‘96. I took the nice Mountain Caribou bull illustrated above at 240 yards, holding the crosshairs across the top of the shoulders. He went down instantly with a heart lung hit and never got up. Expansion of the PowerStar was phenomenal, with a three inch exit wound and massive multi-organ internal damage. This rifle bullets long range performance on big game is nothing short of astounding.
50/45-320 PowerStar (BC=.20)
45/40-350 PowerStar (BC= .28 )
The lubricated SuperSabots keep powder residues softer and require a whole lot less cleaning than other sabots because of the lubricant in the channelures on the sabot. The result is far less plastic buildup in the barrel and far easier reloading without cleaning between shots. The new SuperSabot even has a fitted internal reverse boat-tail to fit the boat-tailed PowerStar. Normally, with SuperSlugs, Buck-Busters or PowerPunch bullets, you will see rifling imprinted all along the length of the bullet after firing. On the SuperSabot, you’ll see the imprinting of the rifling along the legnth of the plastic sabot and imprinting of the leaves of the plastic sabot on the soft lead bullet. This shows that the White Muzzleloading System really works, the soft bullet bellying out onto the plastic, leaving an inprint of the plastic on the lead bullet, and the plastic being forced into the rifling, again leaving an imprint of the rifling on the plastic.
It works so well that the 45/40-350 SuperSabot-PowerStar combination shows 1509 FPS muzzle velocity loaded with 110 gr. P Pyrodex for 1770 ft. lbs. of muzzle energy. Sight in that load at 125 yards and it’ll only rise 2.7 inches above line of sight and fall only 13.7 inches on its way to 200 yards. Sight it in at 150 yards and it only rises 4 1/4 inches above line of sight at 100 yards and falls only 9 3/4 inches at 200 yards. No other muzzleloading bullet can match that performance, especially considering that the 350 grain PowerStar bullet retains 1150 ft. lbs. of energy at 200 yards, is made of the softest of lead ( which remains the best bullet material ever) and expands beautifully with its hollow point.
Just to illustrate how effective the 45/40-350 can be, David (pictured above) used a White .451 caliber Super Safari rifle and the 45/40-350 PowerStar with 110 grains P Pyrodex to take a better-than-good Utah mule deer in late 1994. Range was about 225 yards. He put the red dot just over the buck’s back and knocked him breakfast over tea kettle with a hit through the heart-lungs. The buck was instantly "tits up", and never regained his feet.
A LOOK AT THE FUTURE The 45/40-350 is a terrific bullet for any game that weighs less than 600 lbs. It clearly shows the direction that muzzleloading calibers and bullets are going to take in the future. Better designed bullets with improved nose shapes and higher Ballistic Coefficients are going to take over. It’s inevitable, especially since most hunters don’t enjoy the substantial kick of a powerful load firing a heavy bullet. If he can shoot a lighter bullet, flying faster, flatter and more efficiently, hitting with as much energy as the bigger bullet at distance, he will take to it like a duck to water. The quicker, more efficient bullet will need less powder and a smaller bore for the same performance. Who wouldn’t change. Didn’t our forefathers leave their 45-70's in the closet and take to the new 30-30 in droves for the same reason.
Thus the reason for the .33, .35 and .367 bullets illustrated in this manual. The White-designed .410 typifies what the future will bring, the caliber having caused a revolution once before in the 1880's when .40 caliber rifles like the 40/70 were the rage on the target range and on the plains. Why? Because of their ballistic efficiency, the bullets being longer and heavier for their cross section than the bigger 45's and 50's that had previously been so popular. They also kicked less and were more comfortable to shoot. They were a shoo-in. You might be asking how White is going to get even more efficiency out of the calibers and bullets they now produce. Smaller calibers with longer yet lighter bullets are only part of the answer. The rest of it comes with design, the shape of the bullet being all important. Heretofore, a lead bullet, (the best ballistic medium ever devised), had to be designed to get through resistant air as well as possible while retaining enough of a blunt nose to cause bullet upset and expansion once it hit the game animal. This resulted in lead bullets with long bodies and blunt noses. Even then, the blunt nose wasn’t enough in smaller big game, so designers like Gould came up with the classic deep hollow point of the 1880's. It solved the expansion problem nicely but still left the bullet with the blunt nose. What’s obviously needed is a lead bullet with a deep hollow point and a sharper nose, one that flies through the air with the best of ballistic efficiency and still expands vigorously in light skinned game. This contradictory bullet design is well on the way to production, with all the advantages of a deep Gould hollow point and a ballistically efficient ogival nose. Sadly, the machinery to make it has to be designed at the same time. Making them one at a time is easy but making them in quantities that will get them into the shooters hands at a reasonable price is another thing again. Problem is they have to be cast, hollow pointed then swedged, all separate operations. However, with any luck, you should see this bullet on your White dealer’s shelf sometime. Another anticipated development involves the use of harder plastics for sabots, thus getting higher velocities yet less plastic left in the barrel. This is contradictory, as forcing harder plastic through the rifling will be even more difficult and slower than what we have now, and that can be hard enough to be discouraging. Obviously, the new saboted bullet will have to be slip-fit or nearly so, to minimize the effort of getting it into the barrel. This is again a problem, since current bullets fall out of sabots if not held tightly there by barrel pressure on the sabot side-walls. An interlocking device of some kind would solve the problem. I have applied for a patent on such a device but we have yet to see if it works well enough for eventual production. A method that would sweep plastic, lead and powder residues out of the barrel would also be advantageous. The next shot would load easier, and not require frequent cleaning to maintain accuracy. Base wads were used for years for this purpose, first in muzzleloaders then eventually in cartridges. This led to the development of the copper 'gas check' which worked well in cartridges but not at all in muzzleloaders, the copper being to hard to force down the rifling with the bullet. My Self Cleaning Sabot (SCS) and Self Cleaning Bullet (SCB) expanding gas checks were designed to solve the problem of getting hard copper down the barrel with the bullet and expand into the rifling with the shot, cleaning out the residues of the previous shot as it flies down the barrel. The SCS and SCB are simply tent-like copper gas checks that attach to the base of the sabot or bullet. The tent flattens with the shot, expanding the copper into the rifling. I tried a 600 grain SCB bullet in 504 caliber with 140 grains of PyrodexP in a musket cap ignited M98 Elite Hunter on a hunt for Asian Buffalo. I had previously found that accuracy degraded if I exceeded 120 grains of Pyrodex. Adding the SCB to the bullet returned the accuracy with up to 140 grains, giving me a 20 grain advantage over the non SCB load. The barrel was also markedly easier to load and clean when using the SCB bullet.
Good Hunting, DOC |