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.416 Taylor
Rifle cartridge
Rifle cartridge
| Field | Value | |
|---|---|---|
| name | .416 Taylor | |
| type | Centerfire/Rifle | |
| designer | Robert Chatfield-Taylor | |
| design_date | 1972 | |
| manufacturer | A-Square | |
| parent | .458 Winchester Magnum | |
| case_type | Belted, bottleneck | |
| bullet | .416 | |
| neck | .447 | |
| shoulder | .491 | |
| base | .512 | |
| <!-- | belt_dia | .532 -- |
| rim_dia | .532 | |
| rim_thick | .050 | |
| case_length | 2.5 | |
| length | 3.34 | |
| rifling | 1 in 14 in | |
| primer | Magnum Rifle |
The .416 Taylor is a rifle cartridge. According to Ken Waters in Pet Loads, it was created by Robert Chatfield-Taylor in the early 1970s, with the first rifle in this caliber being a factory barreled Winchester Model 70. The case is based on the .458 Winchester Magnum necked down to accept .416 caliber bullets.
Usage
The .416 Taylor uses a .416 in bullet diameter. With maximum loads, the cartridge is capable of propelling a 400 gr bullet at an average of 2350 ft/s from a 24 in barrel yielding a muzzle energy of 4903 ftlbf. The work on this caliber (performed by Waters) was done with an experimental factory Ruger Model 77. He reported that an absolute maximum load of certain listed powders would push a 400 gr bullet to 2400 ft/s, thereby equaling (and perhaps exceeding) the performance of the .416 Rigby (presuming moderate temperatures and barometric pressures). Waters also reported that 400 gr bullets could exceed 2600 ft/s when propelled by certain listed powders. Under normal hunting conditions, the Taylor cartridge is therefore capable of taking any of the largest and most dangerous game animals in the world.
Gunsmiths are rebarreling Browning BAR .338 Winchester Magnum rifles with .416 Taylor barrels thereby creating semi-automatic hunting rifles in a true dangerous game caliber.
Origin
The cartridge was created to replace the magnum length .416 Rigby which at that time was nearly obsolete, with a cartridge that would fit into a standard length bolt-action rifle. The shorter action rifles are not only easier to carry in heavy cover, but also make it more convenient to carry more ammunition. The advantages to cartridges in .416 inch bullet diameter are that they generally present the shooter with less recoil and flatter trajectory than the larger .458 caliber dangerous game rifles (like the .458 Winchester Magnum). They also have more striking power and penetration than medium bores like the .375 H&H Magnum. The 416 Taylor is a SAAMI standardized cartridge, and was offered as a standard production item by A-Square until it closed in 2011. It is currently loaded by Norma of Sweden.
References
References
- Waters, Ken. (2008). "Pet Loads the Complete Volume 9th Edition". Wolfe Pub Co.
- (27 March 2018). ".416 Taylor".
- Alphin, Arthur B. ed Alphin, Arthur B. Alphin ''An Shot You Want'' (Bedford, KY: On Target Press, 1996), p.513
- (28 March 2018). "Browning BAR in .416 Taylor or .458 Winchester Magnum".
- Boddington, Craig. (March 2007). "The .416 Taylor Revisited". Guns&Ammo.
- Alphin, Arthur B. ed Alphin, Arthur B. Alphin ''An Shot You Want'' (Bedford, KY: On Target Press, 1996), p.511
This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.
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