.300 Weatherby Magnum Explained

.300 Weatherby Magnum
Origin:USA
Type:Rifle
Designer:Roy Weatherby
Design Date:1944
Manufacturer:Weatherby
Production Date:1944–present
Parent:.300 H&H Magnum
Case Type:Belted, bottleneck
Bullet:.308
Neck:.336
Shoulder:.492
Base:.512
Rim Dia:.531
Case Length:2.825
Length:3.562
Rifling:1-10
Primer:Large rifle magnum
Max Pressure:65000
Bw1:150
Btype1:SP
Vel1:3540
En1:4173
Bw2:165
Btype2:SP
Vel2:3390
En2:4210
Bw3:180
Btype3:BST
Vel3:3250
En3:4223
Bw4:200
Btype4:Partition
Vel4:3060
En4:4158
Bw5:220
Btype5:Rn-Ex
Vel5:2845
En5:3954
Test Barrel Length:26
Balsrc:Weatherby [1]

The .300 Weatherby Magnum is a .30 caliber rifle cartridge created by Roy Weatherby in 1944 and produced by Weatherby. It has become the most popular of all the Weatherby cartridges.

Background

Roy Weatherby already had experience with other custom cartridges such as his own .270 Weatherby Magnum when he created the .300 Weatherby. Like most of his other magnum cartridges, this is based on a blown-out .300 H&H Magnum case, using the signature Weatherby double-radius shoulder. The Weatherby was first introduced in 1944, and the .300 Winchester Magnum was introduced in 1963.[2]

In recent years, Remington, Winchester and Ruger have produced rifles in this caliber, and most major ammunition manufacturers now supply factory loads.[3]

Performance

Historically, Weatherby claimed that this is the most powerful .30 caliber magnum rifle commercially available, but the recently introduced .300 Remington Ultra Magnum, the .300 Norma Magnum and Weatherby's own .30-378 Weatherby Magnum are now more powerful. Of course there are quite a few very large .30 caliber wildcat cartridges.

When comparing the .300 RUM and the .300 Weatherby Magnum, however, there is a difference in factory loadings. Performance data is often listed on the side of the ammunition box for those who wish to do an in-store comparison. On average, Weatherby factory ammo is loaded to higher chamber pressures than Remington or Winchester magnum rounds. The Remington round can be handloaded to equal pressures, and as a consequence, surpass the .300 Weatherby in power.

The .300 Weatherby is commonly used by big-game hunters all over the world.[4]

See also

References

Notes and References

  1. https://web.archive.org/web/20080517061230/http://www.weatherby.com/products/ammo.asp?prd_id=6 .300 Weatherby Magnum page at Weatherby
  2. Book: Bullets, Speer . Speer Bullets Reloading Manual #14 . 525. Speer. 2009 . 978-0-9791860-0-4.
  3. Book: Bullets, Speer . Speer Bullets Reloading Manual #14 . 540. Speer. 2009 . 978-0-9791860-0-4.
  4. http://www.chuckhawks.com/subscribers/rifle_cartridge_page/300Wby.htm .300 Weatherby by Chuck Hawks (subscription required)