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I get that...but what will it do that a 30-06 or 308 can't do.Keep in mind that most people with a modern .45/70 don't fire factory ammo. .45/70 factory ammo is designed for old low-chamber-pressure guns.
They handload their own ammo to much higher chamber pressures that can be handled by modern guns. Note that he handloaded his own ammo in the movie.
A .45/70 handloaded to high chamber pressures isn't quite on par with an elephant gun, but it's getting near that neighborhood.
That could be reversed to "What will the .30-06 do that the .45/70 can't do?"I get that...but what will it do that a 30-06 or 308 can't do.
That could be reversed to "What will the .30-06 do that the .45/70 can't do?"
That's a little tougher to distinguish...because you have an equivalency of performance here...right down to both being black powder compatible...like comparing an orange to another orange...this one is slightly bigger and that one is a little sweeter...but if you didn't have the other one to compare it to you just have a really good orange.Some people even ask "What will the .30-06 do that the .270 Winchester can't do?"
That's fine. If anyone is guilty of owning guns because they like them...it's me.Some people like heavy and slow bullets. Some people like light and fast bullets.
If I carried a .44 magnum (or .454 Casull) for bear protection, I'd make it a single action.I love single action revolvers and I own a bunch...but I don't carry one...
Agreed. It's an amazing movie.Jeremy Renner nails the soft spoken, capable, unpreturbable rural non-hero hero and loyal friend every country boy aspires to be.