.600 Nitro Express Explained

.600 Nitro Express
Origin:United Kingdom
Type:Rifle
Service:1915–1916
Used By:British Army
Wars:World War I
Designer:W.J. Jeffery & Co
Design Date:1899
Production Date:1900–present
Is Si Specs:no
Case Type:Rimmed, tapered
Bullet:.620
Land:.606
Neck:.648
Base:.700
Rim Dia:.810
Rim Thick:.065
Case Length:3
Length:3.70
Case Capacity:211.4
Primer:Kynoch No. 40
Bw1:900
Vel1:2050
En1:8400
Bw2:900
Vel2:1950
En2:7600
Bw3:900
Vel3:1850
En3:6840
Test Barrel Length:28
Balsrc:Barnes, Kynoch and C.I.P Data[1]

The .600 Nitro Express (15.7x76mmR) is a large bore Nitro Express rifle cartridge developed by W.J. Jeffery & Co for the purpose of hunting large game.

Design

The .600 Nitro Express is a slightly tapered walled, rimmed, centerfire rifle cartridge designed for use in single-shot and double rifles.

The cartridge fires a 0.62inches diameter, 900gr projectile with three powder loadings: the standard being 100gr of cordite at a muzzle velocity of 1850ft/s; a 110gr loading which generates a muzzle velocity of 1950ft/s; and a 120gr loading which generates a muzzle velocity of 2050ft/s.

Because of the recoil forces generated by this cartridge, rifles chambered in it typically weigh up to 16lb.

History

The .600 Nitro Express was developed by London gunmakers W.J. Jeffery & Co. Sources vary about the date of its introduction, although it would seem in 1900 the first .600 Nitro Express rifle was produced by W.J. Jeffery & Co, a 15lb double barrelled hammer rifle. Jefferys produced around seventy rifles in .600 Nitro Express in four actions, double barrelled hammer break-open, single barrelled break-open, falling block and double barrelled break-open with and without ejectors.

Until the introduction of the .700 Nitro Express in 1988, the .600 Nitro Express was the most powerful commercially available hunting rifle cartridge in the world. Aside from W.J. Jeffery & Co, several gunmakers have and continue to offer rifles chambering this .600 Nitro Express, although in 2009 it was estimated by Holland & Holland that only around one hundred .600 Nitro Express rifles had ever been produced to that time.

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 sixty-two large-bore sporting rifles from British rifle makers, including four .600 Nitro Express rifles, which were issued to regiments. 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 they "pierced them like butter".

Stuart Cloete, sniping officer for the King's Own Yorkshire Light Infantry, stated "We used a heavy sporting rifle - a .600 Express. These had been donated to the army by big game hunters and when we hit a plate we stove it right in. But it had to be fired standing or from a kneeling position to take up the recoil. The first man who fired it from the prone position had his collar bone broken."

Use

The .600 Nitro Express, along with the .577 Nitro Express, was a specialist backup weapon for professional elephant hunters. Too heavy to be carried all day and used effectively, it was usually carried by a gun bearer. It was used when in thick cover and when an effective shot at the heart and lungs was not possible.

In his African Rifles and Cartridges, John "Pondoro" Taylor says the shock of a head shot from a .600 Nitro Express bullet is enough to knock out an elephant for up to half an hour.

Prominent users

In the course of his career, Taylor owned and used two .600 Nitro Express double rifles, the first was regulated for 110gr loadings, the second was a W.J. Jeffery & Co double rifle that weighed 16lb with 24inches barrels and was regulated for 100 gr loadings. He states he was very fond of his Jeffery .600 which he used as a second backup rifle to a .400 Jeffery Nitro Express, and with it he killed between 60 and 70 elephants.

Bror von Blixen-Finecke, Karl Larsen and Major Percy Powell-Cotton all used W.J. Jeffery & Co .600 Nitro Express rifles extensively.

Parent case

In 1929 Holland & Holland produced the .600/577 Rewa by necking down the .600 Nitro Express to accept a bullet.

The .50 British ammunition used in the Vickers .50 machine gun was initially a necked-down .600 NE.[2]

In popular culture

In the 1997 film the character Roland Tembo carries a Searcy Double Barrel Rifle chambered in .600 Nitro Express.[3]

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. https://web.archive.org/web/20171205154758/http://www.cip-bobp.org/homologation/uploads/tdcc/tab-ii/tabiical-en-page130.pdf C.I.P. 600 N.E. (online-PDF 97 KB))
  2. Web site: .5 inch Vickers .
  3. Web site: Searcy . B. . B. Searcy & Co. . Searcy & Co - Double Rifles . BLS Ventures . 18 February 2022.