African Hunter Published Books Hunter's Guide | Classic African Cartridges | Page 12

Chapter One The 7x57 Mauser – A Classic Among Classics By Ganyana he 7x57 or 7mm Mauser as it is commonly called must be the most “classic” of all the African cartridges. It was (and still is) a brilliant cartridge, and three things actually scaled it as the best of the best. The British reverses at Colenso, Spion Kop and Magersfontein (10th Dec 1899 to 24th Jan 1900) during the second Boer War; the American problems with the Spanish at San Juan Hill in 1898; and Karamojo Bell’s book, The Wanderings of an Elephant Hunter. The outcomes of the four battles caused both Britain and America to adopt Mauseractioned rifles (the P14 and Springfield ’03) and Britain to try and adopt a 7mm military cartridge which was only dropped due to the outbreak of WWI (and the P14 similarly not superseding the Lee Enfield as intended). Consequently every soldier or adventurer who stepped into Africa for the next fifty years knew that the 7mm Mauser (a.k.a. .275 Rigby) was suitable for everything up to elephant. When Paul Mauser created the 7x57 in 1892 by necking the German military 7.9 round down, he knew he was on to a winner. Even with the 173gr round-nosed bullet, the 7mm’s velocity of 2300fps was higher than any contemporary military cartridge (2100fps for the 7.9, 2050fps for the .303 and 2150fps for the 30-40 Krag), and this combined with the excellent sectional density of the bullet ensured a very flat trajectory. The velocity was also above the critical threshold (about 2200fps) at which explosive wounds in flesh occur, and this gave the 7mm a very real advantage in stopping power in a close range fire-fight. The explosive wound effect also made the African Hunter Magazine – Classic African Cartridges Page 1