.577 Nitro Express Explained

.577 Nitro Express 3-inch
Origin:United Kingdom
Type:Rifle
Service:1915–1916
Used By:British Army
Wars:World War I
Design Date:1890s
Parent:.577 Black Powder Express
Case Type:Rimmed straight
Bullet:.585
Land:.577
Neck:.610
Base:.660
Rim Dia:.748
Rim Thick:.052
Case Length:3.00
Length:3.70
Case Capacity:185.3
Bw1:750
Vel1:2050
En1:7010
Balsrc:Barnes and Kynoch
.577 Nitro Express 2-inch
Bw1:750
Vel1:1800
En1:5400
Balsrc:Kynoch.

The .577 Nitro Express is a large-bore centerfire rifle cartridge designed for the purpose of hunting large game such as elephant. This cartridge is used almost exclusively in single-shot and double express rifles for hunting in the Tropics or hot climates in general and is a cartridge associated with the golden age of African safaris and Indian shikars.

Design

The .577 Nitro Express is a straight rimmed 0.584inches calibre cartridge designed for use in single-shot and double rifles. It has been made in three case lengths based on their respective black-powder .577 Black Powder Express cartridges.

2-inch

The .577 Nitro Express NaNadj=onNaNadj=on is a conversion of the .577 Black Powder Express -inch, it fires a 750gr projectile at over . Never as popular as the 3-inch version, today it is only available by special order.

3-inch

The .577 Nitro Express 3adj=onNaNadj=on is a conversion of the .577 Black Powder Express 3-inch, it fires a 750gr projectile at over . This cartridge was to become the most popular of the three and a standard round for African elephant hunters in the early 20th century.

3-inch

The .577 Nitro Express NaNadj=onNaNadj=on is a conversion of the .577 Black Powder Express 3-inch, again it was never as popular as the 3-inch version.

History

Following the success of the development in 1898 of the revolutionary .450 Nitro Express by John Rigby & Company, achieved by loading the old .450 Black Powder Express with cordite, similar conversions were made to other blackpowder Express cartridges, including the .577 Black Powder Express in its various case lengths.

Once a standard rifle calibre, the rise of Mauser's Gewehr 98 bolt-action rifles offered cheaper alternatives to the expensive double rifles required by the Nitro Express cartridges. Several manufacturers still make rifles chambered in .577 Nitro Express, including Butch Searcy & Co., Hambrusch Hunting Weapons, Hartmann & Weiss, Heym, Holland & Holland, James Purdey and Sons and Westley Richards.

WWI service

In 1914 and early 1915, German snipers were engaging British Army positions with impunity from behind steel plates that were impervious to .303 British ball ammunition. In an attempt to counter this threat, the British War Office purchased fifty-two large-bore sporting rifles from British rifle makers which were issued to regiments, including two .577 Nitro Express rifles. These large-bore rifles proved very effective against the steel plates used by the Germans, in his book Sniping in France 1914-18 Major H. Hesketh-Prichard, DSO, MC stated that they "pierced them like butter".

Use

The .577 Nitro Express is suitable for hunting all dangerous game, although it was considered something of a specialist elephant hunter's tool for close-cover hunting and emergencies, the harsh recoil this round produces requires a rifle of 13lb minimum weight. Typically a hunter carried a lighter rifle in a smaller calibre for general hunting whilst a rifle bearer carried a heavy gun such as this, a necessity as an exhausted man could not reliably aim such heavy rifles as these.

In his African Rifles and Cartridges, John "Pondoro" Taylor says the .577 Nitro Express is "a magnificent killerit literally crumbles up an elephant", further stating the shock of a head shot from a .577 Nitro Express bullet is enough to knock an elephant out for up to 20 minutes.

Prominent users

James H. Sutherland, who over the course of his life shot between 1,300 and 1,600 elephants, stated in his The Adventures of an Elephant Hunter, "after experimenting with and using all kinds of rifles, I find the most effective to be the double .577 with a 750 grains bullet and a charge in Axite powder equivalent to a hundred grains of cordite." And further stating "I think the superiority of the .577 over the .450 and .500 rifles, will be evident when I state that I have lost elephants with these last two rifles, while I have bagged others with identically the same shots from a .577."

Other famous African users include Major G.H. Anderson (shot between 350 and 400 elephants), Deaf Banks (shot over 1,000 elephants), Quentin Grogan, John A. Hunter (shot more than 1,000 rhinoceros) and Pete Pearson (shot over 2,000 elephants).

"Pondoro" Taylor used a Westley Richards .577 Nitro Express double rifle, stating "it did great work for me amongst elephant, rhino and buffalo; it's much too powerful for anything lighter." He parted with the rifle after only a short period because the single-trigger mechanism was unlike all of his other rifles.

Ernest Hemingway and Alfred Józef Potocki both owned Westley Richards Droplock .577 Nitro Express double rifles, Stewart Granger owned two including Potocki's rifle.

Parent case

See also

External links