Please click on the picture for more detail.
.378 Weatherby Magnum, Newer H/S, JSP, Some *Patina, see page*, One Cartridge not a Box!
$9.95
Has Patina* see note below.
One Cartridge, not a box, the picture of the box is for reference only!
For all 17 Weatherby calibers available, please click here: LINK!
For more information on this item, please see below.
In stock
Description
One Cartridge, not a box, the picture of the box is for reference only
One Cartridge, not a box: .378 Weatherby by Weatherby, “NEW” production using (then) new brass cases with “WEATHERBY 378 WBY MAG” Head-Stamp and loaded with a 270 grain Spire JSP (Jacketed Soft Point) projectile. This is older (new) stock, with some Patina*(tarnish, as all brass does tarnish, and is desirable among many collectors, but can be cleaned and brightened with a little brass polish if you wish too, like the one in picture.
For more versions of this caliber , please see below in related items.
History of .378 Weatherby Cartridge:
After production of his cartridges based on the .300 H&H case, Roy Weatherby produced an even larger cartridge in 1953, based on the.416 Rigby Case.
The 378 Weatherby is a blown out 416 Rigby case to increase powder capacity, then necked down to except .378 projectiles.
The cartridge has projectlies from 235 to 350 grain, and velocites up to 3,200 Feet per Sec. to produce up to 6,000 Foot Pounds of Energy per square inch. Yes, 6,000 Pounds !!!
For more versions and headstamps of this caliber please see below in related items
For all Weatherby 17 Cartridge available, please click here: LINK!
History of the Weatherby cartridge line:
As a young man, in the late 1940’s, Roy Weatherby developed an insatiable interest in ballistics and rifle performance.
At a time when many firearms “experts” were promoting large bullets traveling at slow speeds, Roy was experimenting with lighter weight bullets traveling at extremely high velocities.
It was his belief that this combination was ideal in creating the hydrostatic shock needed to kill animals quickly and humanely.
In Roy’s mind, there was no other way: speed kills – period.
Roy’s initial work began with developing his high powered, magnum cartridges.
He developed the .220 Rocket (based on the .220 Swift), and the first Weatherby Magnums – .257, .270 and .300 (based on the .300 H&H Mag.).
From his small operation in South Gate, California, Roy was building his own rifles on virtually any actions he could obtain (FN Mauser, Schultz & Larsen and Mathieus to name a few), as well as offering to re-chamber rifles for his newly designed magnum calibers.
Soon, his high powered cartridges began to draw the attention of noted gun writers Jack O’Connor, Elmer Keith and influential such as Sheldon Coleman (of Coleman Company fame).
Over the years, Roy would have many “friendly arguments,” often conducted through printed letters and rebuttals in magazines, with the likes of O’Connor, Keith and other firearms experts on the merits of his high velocity cartridges and rifles.
By the mid to late 1950’s Weatherby had expanded his line of magnum cartridges to include the .378 Weatherby Magnum (which replaced the .375 Weatherby Magnum) and the .460 (the world’s most powerful cartridge, at the time, delivering nearly four tons of muzzle energy).
At that time, he was producing his rifles on German FN Mauser and Czechoslovakian Brevex Magnum Mauser actions.Later, in 1957, he would develop a new action – originally designated the Model 58 (later to become the legendary Mark V) – specifically designed to handle the magnum loads of his increasingly popular cartridges.
Resource : 1995 Weatherby Catalog Roy E. Weatherby Sr., Firearms Innovator, 77, AP Published:
April 10.AP Published: April 10, 1988LEAD: Roy E. Weatherby Sr., a leading authority on ballistics who was the creator of the famed Weatherby rifle favored by big-game hunters, died Tuesday.
He was 77 years old It was Mr. Weatherby’s perfection of his theory on high velocity, and the resulting Weatherby Magnum cartridges, that led to the development of the Weatherby rifle.
Roy E. Weatherby Sr., a leading authority on ballistics who was the creator of the famed Weatherby rifle favored by big-game hunters, died Tuesday.
He was 77 years old.It was Mr. Weatherby’s perfection of his theory on high velocity, and the resulting Weatherby Magnum cartridges, that led to the development of the Weatherby rifle
Additional information
Weight | 0.10 lbs |
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