2 Attachment(s)
400/350 Kynoch Nitro Express
My 400/350 Kynoch with FMJRN
Introduced in 1899, the .400/350 Nitro Express is a rimmed cartridge originally designed for use in single-shot and double rifles. In 1899 Rigby approached the engineers at Mauser to make a special Gewehr 98 bolt action to handle this cartridge, its introduction in 1900 was the birth of the magnum length bolt action, paving the way for such cartridges as the .375 H&H and .416 Rigby.[3]
The .400/350 Nitro Express fires a .358" diameter 310 grain projectile at either 2000 fps or 2150 fps, depending on the source.
MkVII 303 for scale.
1 Attachment(s)
Kynoch .318 Westley Richards
My .318 Kynoch nitro express for the .318 Westley Richards.
Westley Richards introduced the .318, primarily for use in their M98 Mauser and later their P14 Enfield based bolt action sporting rifles.
The .318 Westley Richards is a rimless bottlenecked cartridge primarily intended for use in Africa. The bullet diameter is actually .330", the naming is due to British nomenclature which sometimes names cartridges by their land diameter rather than the more commonly applied groove diameter.
Westley Richards offered solid, soft-point or the revolutionary LT-capped[note 1] bullets in two loadings, the more common being a 250 gr bullet with a listed speed of 2,400 ft/s, whilst a lighter loading firing a 180 gr bullet at 2,700 ft/s was also offered for lighter game. The 250gr bullet possessed high sectional density and thus excellent penetration.
In my book I have on "African Rifles and Cartridges", by John "Pondoro" Taylor wrote that the 250gr .318 Westley Richards is "fully capable of driving its bullet the full length of a big elephant's body.
MkVII 303 for scale.