Mare's Leg

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I was watching "Wanted, Dead or Alive" and got to wondering about Josh Randall's gun. I understand they were chambered in .44-40 and for visual effect, Josh wore .45-70 cartridges in his belt loops.

I have never fired a .45-70 and understand that the bullet doesn't leave the barrel without a fight. So help a non cowboy's curiosity.

If you did fire a .45-70 from a mare's leg, what kind of jolt are we talkin' about.
 
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There is a revolver currently made chambered in .45-70.. I believe it's called the BFR revolver...... I think Magnum Research has owned the company or has a big stake in it...most people use milder loads of .45-70 ammo they intend to use in their BFR... I suspect that full bore/maximum loads for the .500S&W & .460S&W exceed the loads commonly used in the .45-70 BFR by a good bit.
 
45-70

My son and I ran accross this one last summer at the outstanding Buffalo Bill Museum and grave-site outside of Denver.

Frankly, I can't imagine cuttting loose with this hand cannon with both feet firmly planted on the ground, much less galloping along on a horse. But I guess the Indian who had it was packing the ultimate big-bore snubby/concealed carry piece.
 

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I was watching "Wanted, Dead or Alive" and got to wondering about Josh Randall's gun. I understand they were chambered in .44-40 and for visual effect, Josh wore .45-70 cartridges in his belt loops.

I have never fired a .45-70 and understand that the bullet doesn't leave the barrel without a fight. So help a non cowboy's curiosity.

If you did fire a .45-70 from a mare's leg, what kind of jolt are we talkin' about.

The name fits the firearm:)
 
I've shot a .44 mag 3" with magnum loads, an 870 with 3" magnum loads, but the hardest-kicking round/gun I've ever fired was a .303 Enfield No.1 MKIII with that small, brass plate on the stock against my shoulder covered by a T-shirt. Damn.....I know it's not all that powerful of a round, but nothing ever kicked me like that.
 
If you want to go to the trouble, you can actually calculate the recoil energy of any firearm, assuming you know the gun weight, the bullet weight, the powder weight, and the bullet MV. There are some handguns in .45-70 (I think T/C barrels in .45-70 are available), but I believe most of those who shoot them use light loads. Back in the frontier days, .45-70 ammunition used by cavalry troopers with trapdoor carbines used a lighter load than was used by the heavier infantry rifles.
 
My Remington Model 81 seems to really kick hard even though it's just a .300 Savage. I think it's because of the whole barrel flying back in recoil. A couple months ago in Arizona I shot a different type of Mare's Leg called the Thunderbolt. It's an AWA replica of the Winchester pump 44-40 in legal pistol form. One of ten made, it's fun and MUCH faster than a lever action. With factory equivocal reloads recoil was virtually non existent.



 
My Remington Model 81 seems to really kick hard even though it's just a .300 Savage. I think it's because of the whole barrel flying back in recoil.

I have two Remington 81s in .300 Savage, and with full loads they are indeed punishing to your shoulder. The Remington Model 8 or 81 in .35 Rem is also said to be painful to shoot, but I do not have one of those. The first time I took my brother (who is not a small man) out to shoot one of the .300 Savage M81s, he decided after the first shot, that was enough. I have developed some lighter handloads in that caliber which are less fearsome, but still develop enough recoil impulse to operate the aqction.

The Remington M8/M81 rifles are somewhat unusual, and operate on the long recoil principle. That means you have a lot of metal mass moving rearward at high velocity which comes to a stop inside the receiver very suddenly. And you are very aware of it. Those rifles in lighter calibers, such as the .25, .30, and .32 Remington, are not nearly as unpleasant to fire as one shooting a full-load .300 Savage. By the way, you can very easily form .300 Savage brass from .308 Win brass, and in fact the .300 Savage cartridge (which dates from the early 1920s) was the model for the development of the 7.62x51 NATO military cartridge. The two are very similar, except for the much shorter neck of the .300 Savage.
 
I don't find my Model 81 in 35 Remington to be the least bit painful. But then I find most comments on "punishing recoil" to be humorous and generally overstated. But perhaps it is just me.
 
The worst, the dumbest thing I ever did in my 20's was to hip hold a sxs double barrel 12ga and pull both triggers. The trigger guard bit my trigger finger. But it looked scary.

I haven't seen too many rifles kick harder than a 12 ga.
 
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I do believe I have read that the Model 92 used by Steve McQueen was in .44-40 caliber.

The extra large cartridges in his ammo belt were strictly for show!!

UPDATED INFO

Randall's special holster held a sawed-off .44-40 Winchester rifle nicknamed the "Mare's Leg" instead of the six-gun carried by the typical Western character, although the cartridges in the gun belt were dummy .45-70, chosen because they "looked tougher".
 
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