There are guns, and then there are GUNS

Most of us are familiar with gauge designations for shotguns, the familiar 12, 16, 20, etc. Knowledgeable shooters know what the gauge number represents: the number of pure lead balls of a given diameter that weigh one pound. The bigger the bore, the fewer lead balls it takes to reach one pound, and the smaller the gauge number.

Some historically-minded shooters also know that gauge rifles were once quite common in England, where they use the term “bore” instead of “gauge”. In the black powder era, a 12-bore rifle was a fairly common big-game rig. Early dangerous-game hunters often used 8-bores or even 4-bores against buffalo and elephant. There’s an excellent article on the big 8s and 4s here.

I’d known about those beasts before. I did NOT know that there’s now a 2-bore, built by master gunsmith Giles Whittome. And yes, there’s video of very, very stupid brave men shooting this monster. Click here and be amazed. Mathematically-inclined readers no doubt realize we’re talking about a rifle that shoots HALF-POUND bullets. Oh, and the rounds they’re shooting in that video are reduced loads. Maximum loads burn 24 drams of black powder; that’s a full ounce-and-a-half or 656 grains!

I’ll stick to my friendly little .416 Rigby, thanks very much.

  1. 2 bores are nothing new – Sir Sam Baker used one to hunt Elephants in the 19th century. Personally, I’ve been thinking about building a 4 bore dropping block setup on a carriage, ever since I discovered NEI makes 3500 grain molds, and Krieger makes .950 bore barrels.

    a 3500grn, 955 bullet next to a 44 mag cartridge

  2. You know, I thought Baker’s “Baby” was a 4-bore, but I could well be mis-remembering…

  3. Nope, Baby was a 2 bore.

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