FlyingScot
Lil-Rokslider
I've always had a soft spot for big bore revolvers, and spent a fair amount of time growing up loading for and shooting my dad's Dan Wesson .44, but unless you count the smith 625 I shot in USPSA revolver class in my 20s, I've somehow never gotten around to adding a large wheelgun to the collection. Between that and Ruger's reasonably-priced 6.5" Bisley SBH out in .454 Casull and .480 Ruger, I'm starting to strongly consider adding a boomer to the safe, mostly as a fun gun for load development and for thumping deer/hogs/auodad that venture close enough to the stand.
The .454 seems to be the more flexible choice off the bat since you can stuff .45 LC in for range time, and enjoys a comparatively huge selection of factory loads to choose from. But (as someone who handloads) the more posts and articles I read, the more it sounds like the .480 is just as happy chucking the 370 and 410 gr lead WFNs at subsonic speeds as it is with full-house hunting loads, and purportedly less of a handful recoil-wise at the top end of the load charts than the .454, too. Does anyone have any experience with the big Ruger that would sway them one way or another?
I know if logic was running the show for my planned usage, a .44 mag SBH Hunter stuffed with 300 gr handloads would tick all the boxes in a more reasonable fashion (and not require a trip to the gunsmith if I ever decide to put a scope on it), but where's the fun in that?
The .454 seems to be the more flexible choice off the bat since you can stuff .45 LC in for range time, and enjoys a comparatively huge selection of factory loads to choose from. But (as someone who handloads) the more posts and articles I read, the more it sounds like the .480 is just as happy chucking the 370 and 410 gr lead WFNs at subsonic speeds as it is with full-house hunting loads, and purportedly less of a handful recoil-wise at the top end of the load charts than the .454, too. Does anyone have any experience with the big Ruger that would sway them one way or another?
I know if logic was running the show for my planned usage, a .44 mag SBH Hunter stuffed with 300 gr handloads would tick all the boxes in a more reasonable fashion (and not require a trip to the gunsmith if I ever decide to put a scope on it), but where's the fun in that?