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Cartridge of the Week

Talyn

SAINT
Founding Member
The .454 Casull
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4 Casull is a firearm cartridge, developed as a wildcat cartridge in 1958 by Dick Casull, Duane Marsh and Jack Fullmer. It was first announced in November 1959 by Guns & Ammo magazine. The basic design was a lengthened and structurally improved .45 Colt case. The .454 Casull round is primarily intended for hunting medium or large game, metallic silhouette shooting, and bear protection.

The wildcat cartridge finally went mainstream in 1997, when Ruger began chambering its Super Redhawk in this caliber. Taurus followed with the Raging Bull model in 1998 and the Taurus Raging Judge Magnum in 2010. The .45 Schofield and .45 Colt cartridges can fit into the .454's chambers, but not the other way around because of the lengthened case (very similar to the relationship between .38 Special and .357 Magnum cartridges, as well as the .44 Special and .44 Magnum cartridges).

The .454 Casull was finally commercialized in 1998, when SAAMI published its first standards for the cartridge. The Casull cartridges were originally loaded with a triplex load of propellants, which gave progressive burning, aided by the rifle primer ignition, resulting in a progressive acceleration of the bullet as it passed through the barrel. The new Casull round uses a small rifle primer rather than a pistol primer, because it develops extremely high chamber pressures of over 60,000 CUP (copper units of pressure) (410 MPa), and the rifle primer has a significantly stronger cup than a pistol primer. The round is one of the most powerful handgun cartridges in production.

The .454 Casull generates almost 5 times the recoil of the .45 Colt, and about 75% more recoil energy than the .44 Magnum. It can deliver a 250 grain bullet with a muzzle velocity of over 1,900 feet per second, developing up to 2,000 ft-lb of energy from a handgun. One Buffalo Bore loading drives a heavier, 300 grain, JFN bullet at 1,650 ft/s for 1,813 ft-lb of muzzle energy.

The first commercially available revolver chambered in .454 Casull was made by Freedom Arms in 1983 as a five-shot single action Model 83 revolver that is capable of firing .45 ACP, .45 Colt and .454 Casull with interchangeable cylinders. The .460 Smith & Wesson Magnum cartridge introduced in 2005 is a lengthened .454 Casull cartridge and has the same diameter as a .45 Colt or .454 Casull. Therefore, revolvers chambered for .460 S&W will also chamber .454 Casull, .45 Colt, and .45 Schofield (.45 S&W).
 
If I feel under-gunned with a 300 grain 44 Magnum, I carry my rifle.
The Casull is a nice exercise in engineering.
My understanding is the 480 Ruger throws a goodly projectile but is not nearly so harsh on the old, tired joints.
That said, I have rifles for the truly scary stuff.
 
If I feel under-gunned with a 300 grain 44 Magnum, I carry my rifle.
The Casull is a nice exercise in engineering.
My understanding is the 480 Ruger throws a goodly projectile but is not nearly so harsh on the old, tired joints.
That said, I have rifles for the truly scary stuff.
I'm a bit of a recoil junky. I can't think of much a +p+ 340gr .44 won't answer. Like you, I'd just step up to my guide gun if I thought the .44 wasn't enough. I just think it'd be fun.
 
I'm a bit of a recoil junky. I can't think of much a +p+ 340gr .44 won't answer. Like you, I'd just step up to my guide gun if I thought the .44 wasn't enough. I just think it'd be fun.
Fun DOES make sense!
I must admit a long distance dreaming about 480s in the night.
 
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