NightForce NXS 2.5-10x42Toying with grabbing a 375 Ruger as well. No reason other than why not.
What scope(s) are folks looking at on theirs?
Depends on how you hunt, but with a bullet like the 260gn Accubond, the 375 Ruger can provide good mid range ballistics. On my son's rifle, we are going to put a 1-10 March on it. That way he can stalk in thick timber with the scope set on 1-2 power, but if he gets a cross gully shot at 400-500 meters he can dial up the elevation and use the top end of the magnification range. That really lets us make use of all the flexibility the 375 Ruger can offer.Toying with grabbing a 375 Ruger as well. No reason other than why not.
What scope(s) are folks looking at on theirs?
Sevens is spot on. Anything in the plains game category, including eland, can be handled by a 30-06. My wife took a 7mm Mauser on both hunts and it managed sable, and mountain zebra without any drama.
For the bigger critters, the .375 is the right choice. I prefer the Ruger version over the H&H solely because it is shorter. That makes it much easier to work with in any long action without the issue of loaded rounds being difficult to eject. On a lot of the H&H chambered rifles, a loaded round will hit the front ring when you try to eject it. Very annoying. You can also handload the Ruger a little stouter than the H&H. There are no downsides to it. Same amount of magazine capacity, slightly higher power, same wide variety of bullets from 235 up to 350, fits in any long action. It's just not nostalgic.
Jeremy
Not an issue with feeding. The H&H design is a dream to get to feed.I’ve never had an issue ejecting or feeding rounds through any of the 4 375HH rifles I’ve owned. I always felt that the round fed and ejected great just because of the shape.
One downside to the 375 Ruger is that the only company that makes factory Ammo is hornady. Not a big deal I guess if you buy 5-10 boxes and use the brass to reload. I’d buy a 375 Ruger if I came across an early model alaskan without that stupid muzzle brake thing.