Amos Keeto
WKR
- Joined
- Dec 13, 2023
- Messages
- 440
The .300 H&H Mag (originally named Holland's Super .30) was the first commercial cartridge that "required" a belt. The shoulder of the case was so long, they put a belt on the case to simplify headspacing.Less powder and recoil for similar performance. No belt. Not much really. But in all reality there is very little effective difference in hunting cartridges across a very broad range for 90+% of uses. Yet here we are all in another cartridge debate thread. The 7 rem mag has had a good run and more than likely will continue to. In terms of separation from where the market and cartridge design has been been going for some time now though, the belted cartridges are the most antiquated.
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
Since then, "belted case" and "magnum" have become synonymous. American manufacturers picked up on the popularity of "magnum" and began belting cartridges that really didn't "need" a belt, but marketing made "belt" a seller!
So, if you have a loading manual, do this!
Compare the .270 Win and the 7mm Rem Mag.
Compare the same bullet weight and the same powder. The .270 will do everything the 7 Mag will do with less powder.
Do the same thing with the .300 H&H with the .300 Win Mag.
Same bullet weight, same powder.
The H&H will do everything the WinMag will do with the same powder.
The difference is on the top end of the bullet weight and fps factors.
I used to bust a buddies chops over his 7 Mag being no more than a noisy .270!