At The Shootists Holiday I was given a cartridge I had never seen.

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JimT
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At The Shootists Holiday I was given a cartridge I had never seen.

Post by JimT »

IMG_7803.JPG
IMG_7800.JPG
Compared to .45 ACP
IMG_7804.JPG
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Grizz
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Re: At The Shootists Holiday I was given a cartridge I had never seen.

Post by Grizz »

JimT wrote: Fri Jun 20, 2025 9:05 pm IMG_7803.JPG

IMG_7800.JPG

Compared to .45 ACP
IMG_7804.JPG
That looks good. I could maybe give up on the 45 Super if i could get a 475 ACP . :)
Bearskinner
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Re: At The Shootists Holiday I was given a cartridge I had never seen.

Post by Bearskinner »

Here’s a revolver that shoots them.
IMG_3666.jpeg
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Paladin
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Re: At The Shootists Holiday I was given a cartridge I had never seen.

Post by Paladin »

I have seen the ammo and revolvers in Alaska. Too much for me.
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Grizz
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Re: At The Shootists Holiday I was given a cartridge I had never seen.

Post by Grizz »

Bearskinner wrote: Fri Jun 20, 2025 9:44 pm Here’s a revolver that shoots them.IMG_3666.jpeg
what bullet weights do you shoot and what velocities. that is one cartridge i should have gotten into . . .
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Scott Tschirhart
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Re: At The Shootists Holiday I was given a cartridge I had never seen.

Post by Scott Tschirhart »

Indeed! I was given a similar cartridge with similar markings!
Bill in Oregon
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Re: At The Shootists Holiday I was given a cartridge I had never seen.

Post by Bill in Oregon »

Interesting. I hadn't even heard of it. Was it an intermediate step before the .480???
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JimT
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Re: At The Shootists Holiday I was given a cartridge I had never seen.

Post by JimT »

Bill in Oregon wrote: Sat Jun 21, 2025 8:10 am Interesting. I hadn't even heard of it. Was it an intermediate step before the .480???
It's the 480 cartridge. Same length as the .44 Magnum cartridge. I heard that this was the original designation of the cartridge before they settled on "480 Ruger."
samsi
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Re: At The Shootists Holiday I was given a cartridge I had never seen.

Post by samsi »

I prefer the 475 Ruger moniker to "480", makes more sense to me. At the time they came out I thought I'd like one of the 4 5/8" Bisleys but have never even seen one in real life, and honestly, my 45 Blackhawk will do any heavy lifting I'm likely to need.
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Re: At The Shootists Holiday I was given a cartridge I had never seen.

Post by LeverGunner »

Thanks for sharing. I've never heard of it.
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348win
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Re: At The Shootists Holiday I was given a cartridge I had never seen.

Post by 348win »

Cool

475 Ruger is a more proper name than 480 Ruger

But 480 is a better keyword to find it fast and not mix it in w 475 Linebaugh brass or ammo.

Maybe a spinoff of 38 spec/357 mag; the specials a higher number there also
348win
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Re: At The Shootists Holiday I was given a cartridge I had never seen.

Post by 348win »

I find the 480 tamer to shoot than a 44 mag. Its not as snappy, just a big manageable thump. Real nice.

The SBH "post style rubber grip" is a blessing
A SA w a steel backstrap against your palm will yield a different result I'm sure.
High Desert Hunter
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Re: At The Shootists Holiday I was given a cartridge I had never seen.

Post by High Desert Hunter »

samsi wrote: Sat Jun 21, 2025 9:32 am I prefer the 475 Ruger moniker to "480", makes more sense to me. At the time they came out I thought I'd like one of the 4 5/8" Bisleys but have never even seen one in real life, and honestly, my 45 Blackhawk will do any heavy lifting I'm likely to need.
To me the 480 Ruger is just like a bigger 45 Colt, I feel no need to push it, let the bullet weight and diameter do the work.

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Re: At The Shootists Holiday I was given a cartridge I had never seen.

Post by 4t5 »

Rumble.com/ hickock45
JRD
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Re: At The Shootists Holiday I was given a cartridge I had never seen.

Post by JRD »

It’s not an uncommon thing for preproduction ammo to have a working name or even the wrong head stamp if the proper bunting die isn’t ready during development.
Usually this prototype ammo is consumed between the gun and ammo manufactures in testing before the official launch of a new cartridge. When these types of cartridges do wind up in the field I’d guess it’s due to someone with an industry connection getting some preproduction sample ammo.

The engineers and technical people are doing all the development work on the actual ammunition while the marketing people are thinking of the best name for a company’s new cartridge.

In keeping with American tradition, numbers affixed to cartridge names are a mash up of actual bullet diameter, gross rounding off to catchy sounding numbers, or slight variations on diameter numbers to differentiate from existing cartridges.
The working name of 475 Ruger becoming 480 is an example of the latter.
I’d bet whoever had the supply of 475 Ruger cartridges has some connection to either Ruger or Hornady.
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