EVERYONE must shoot a 500 magnum once!!!

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this caliber is devastating!! during a pasture shooting session we shot a mix of loads for this thing. the 700 grain was almost unmanageable. really excessive :eek: but so far the 440 grain flat nose are my favorite. we shot frozen milk jugs and one shot destroyed them. also the cans of tomato soup were hilariously messy. but the most interesting part was when we were chilling out with a few shiner bock and some wild hog's wondered up in the wrong place at the wrong time :rolleyes: the damage this round did to that hog was disgusting lol it literally blew a huge hole out of the other side of this thing. i don't think the rest will come ruin the field again anytime soon :p but everyone should experience this gun once.

the recoil on the 700 grain was like trying to catch a bat that was swung at you, so i don't recommended that round first time out :)

next time I will bring the video camera because we are shooting an American Standard toilett!!!:D i anticipate allot of shrapnel mwhahahahah probably some melons also.
 
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I would beg to differ. I find that a full house 357 Magnum to be all I care to take on in my 38 ounce 620 and I'll leave the 44 and larger Magnums for those younger and more foolish than myself. As for the reports that "it's not that bad", I aint buying it.

Now, on a positive note, the monogrip originally developed for the 500 Magnum is just the ticket for making the 357 Magnum in my 620 envigorating instead of painful.
 
We're having S&W days at our club in June and I can't wait to shoot the 500. Had a chance to shoot a Desert Eagle .50 tonight.

What a let down. That thing was a pussycat.:mad:
 
I think that I'll just stick with my wimpy little model 29. I'm kinda a wuss when it comes to pain.
 
There's a technique to shooting the big thumper. A sort of "ride the wave" shoulder, arm and wrist action that allows you to dissipate the energy. It's not a bench gun IMO, the recoil dumps right into your wrists that way. If you can master that weapon, shooting anything else feels easier.
Nothing else short of a hot-loaded Sharps puts that much energy on target.
 
There's a technique to shooting the big thumper. A sort of "ride the wave" shoulder, arm and wrist action that allows you to dissipate the energy. It's not a bench gun IMO, the recoil dumps right into your wrists that way. If you can master that weapon, shooting anything else feels easier.
Nothing else short of a hot-loaded Sharps puts that much energy on target.

it recoils differently than i expected, it doesn't really climb.... it shoves your arm back, definitely different. so far i have only shot 110 rounds out of it. but I find keeping my hand on tight and relaxing my elbow and shoulder makes it allot nicer. i shot about 60 rounds today and my wrist is a little tender lol so i still need to experiment with the technique. its definitely fun though!!! and shooting this definitely helped my over all control of smaller guns. if anyone has some technique tips i would appreciate it. no one around me has any pointers for me :rolleyes:

also my budy was shooting this thing with a bowling brace on lol he said it helped tremendously.
 
Drinking beer and shooting toilets...who says western civilization is dead?
 
because its one of those guns that is like WOW after you pop one off and its very loud :D

Can't emphasis loud enough....

It's important people realize this gun "barks" louder than most any other, especially the 500s with shorter ported barrels and hand-loaded with powders like H110/WW296.

Wear the very best ear protection available and insist those shooting with you do the same...
 
***** cat

We're having S&W days at our club in June and I can't wait to shoot the 500. Had a chance to shoot a Desert Eagle .50 tonight.

What a let down. That thing was a pussycat.:mad:

I don't know what you were shooting through the 50AE, but I have owned the IMI version from the early '90s and I think it's pretty stout, recoil-wise. It's difficult to compare a revolver to a gas operated semi-auto in that regard. The Desert Eagle was designed with a double/double recoil spring meant to tame recoil, and, along with the gas system, it seems to do a pretty good job of it. That may be why you had the reaction you did to the 50AE.

I would love to shoot the S&W 500, but only for 10 or 20 rounds. My wrists are only good for 2 magazines worth with the 50AE ***** cat. My Son, when he was in high school, could shoot that thing all day, and do it well to boot. I guess I need to look at the numbers on the two weapons/rounds to see how the ballistics compare.
 
I had a chance to shoot one with a comp on it last year. Honestly I've felt worse out of my 629 Classic.

Sometimes I even think the SP101 2 and 1/8th inch can be worse than the 629.
 
I've shot thousands of handgun rds. in about every caliber and had a chance to shoot a friends 500 in a 2" (?) no comp and have no idea as to why they ever made that gun.
 
I guess I need to look at the numbers on the two weapons/rounds to see how the ballistics compare.

Look away, the .500 Mag is WAY out of the .50 DE's league. What is a full load in the DE is a modest load in the .500.

If you want to seat the slugs out to use the full cylinder length like John Ross does, the difference becomes much greater. Plus, you can shoot anything out of the .500. With the DE, you're restricted to more expensive jacketed slugs.

The .500 IS the king of the power hill. Don
 
I have a friend, Kip, who's entire collection of guns is rotated from year to year. Once, he bought a .375 H&H, because he wanted to be able to flatten an elk at 300 yards. The funny part is that he's never even shot a deer before. He sold it after it knocked his glasses off the second time!

More recently he bought the big .500, with the 8" barrel. We played with it thoroughly, with some pretty big handloads, too. If I moved back to Alaska I might own one, but I see no need for one in the hills of the Oregon coast. My 629 will take an elk if I need it to.

Since then, Kip sold the .500, and bought a Ruger Redhawk.
 
I'd have more fun with a .22
If you have more fun listening to loud noises and blowing things up than you do honing your shooting skills maybe you should join the military and go for EOD.
 
their not too bad for honing your shooting skills either..

HPIM0730.jpg

and really they aren't that bad recoil wise, a 240 grain slug out of a four inch .44 feels about the same to me.
 
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