.700 Nitro Express | |
Origin: | United Kingdom |
Type: | Big Game Rifle |
Designer: | Jim Bell / William Feldstein |
Design Date: | 1988 |
Manufacturer: | Holland & Holland |
Production Date: | 1988–present |
Parent: | N/A |
Case Type: | Rimmed, straight |
Bullet: | .700 |
Land: | .688 |
Neck: | .730 |
Base: | .780 |
Rim Dia: | .890 |
Rim Thick: | .086 |
Case Length: | 3.50 |
Length: | 4.20 |
Case Capacity: | 316.9 |
Primer: | Boxer
|
Bw1: | 1000 |
Btype1: | SP |
Vel1: | 2000 |
En1: | 9000 |
Balsrc: | Kynoch [1] |
The .700 Nitro Express (17.8×89mmR) is a big-game rifle cartridge. The cartridge is typically charged with around 250 grains of powder, in addition to a two-grain igniter charge (to reduce the tendency of the cartridge to hang fire from such large powder charges).[2] The cartridge was introduced in 1988 by the boutique gunmakers Holland & Holland (H&H) of London. It was developed by Jim Bell and William Feldstein and built by H&H. Feldstein had tried unsuccessfully to get H&H to build a .600 Nitro Express for him, but they had already ceased production. However, when Bell and Feldstein produced an entirely new .700 Nitro Express cartridge, they were able to attract the interest of H&H, which was looking for a new big-bore cartridge. After production began, the backlog of orders was so great that it continued to 2007 and H&H restarted the production of .600 Nitro Express guns.[3]
In many respects, this cartridge parallels the .600 Nitro Express. It is essentially a scaled-up version of that cartridge, but is somewhat more powerful, and fires a heavier 1,000-grain (64.8 g) bullet. The case itself is a completely new case, not simply another case resized. Double rifles are extremely expensive, starting at about US$10,000 and selling up to US$260,000 in 2015, and have generally been replaced by repeater-rifles using rounds such as the .458 Winchester Magnum.
Single factory loaded .700 Nitro cartridges are available, typically at US$100 each.
The .700 Nitro Express develops an approximate average of 8900ftlbf of muzzle energy with a 1000gr bullet at 20000NaN0. Handloaders can push the cartridge to generate as much as 15000ftlb of energy in a modern bolt action, by using a 1000gr bullet fired at 26000NaN0. However, doing so necessitates a rifle so heavy it is almost inoperable for hunting purposes. Lathe turned cases as used in the Accurate Reloading rifle above will suffer blown primers at this level though a good source of drawn brass would allow (in theory) velocities up to 2700ft/s.
The typical average muzzle velocity of a factory-loaded cartridge is 20000NaN0. In the 18lb rifle used by Accurate Reloading this would result in recoil energy of approximately 160ftlbf. This is more than ten times the average recoil from a .308 Winchester which is a common hunting calibre, and more than 4 times the recoil of a strong .45-70 Government round.
Rifle calibres comparable to the .700 Nitro Express in terms of power and recoil include the following: