Playing With The .41 Magnum

Jim Taylor
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Wednesday, November 05, 2025, 08:05 (32 days ago)

When I was casting bullets some of what I made were for the .41 Magnum. I have a beautiful old NEI mold that throws a 230 gr. flat point bullet. The mold is close to perfect and the bullets are accurate. My standard load is 15.5 gr. of 2400.

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I had not shot the gun in awhile and wanted a little less power so I loaded a couple hundred with 8.0 gr. of Unique.

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These are pleasant to shoot and seem accurate. Now I just need to work on those fliers. :-D

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I like that nose bore riding bullet.

WB
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Wednesday, November 05, 2025, 09:15 (32 days ago) @ Jim Taylor

Lots of weight out front leaving more room in the case to mitigate pressure. One of my favorite .41 is the LFNGC 265 gr. At 1400 fps there is not much it won’t shoot through. 2400 is great, Blue Dot, Lil’gun all good powders too. I use them in the .41 GNR as well which performs much like the .414 Super Mag of years gone by. I can load good density loads at reasonable pressures that are about max for the .41 REM, just cruise right along. This is a fantastic rig and handles well in the field.

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You make it hard to be a minimalist.

John W
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Wednesday, November 05, 2025, 09:43 (32 days ago) @ WB

I am trying to live a simple life off grid but when I see such things I kind of daydream of using it in the wilds.

That is the bullet I was talking about below.

AlanT
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Wednesday, November 05, 2025, 14:10 (32 days ago) @ WB

From my 7 1/2" Hunter, my load, like yours, breaks 1400 by a tad.

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Wow, you shot two Bison?!

WB
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Wednesday, November 05, 2025, 14:42 (32 days ago) @ AlanT

After seeing complete penetration on large hogs, maybe even a little better than the .44 mag with 310 gr., I knew the 265/270 gr. .41 was something special. Somehow recoil is sting free and notably less.

I shot just the one in front of me.

AlanT
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Wednesday, November 05, 2025, 15:48 (31 days ago) @ WB

My hunting partner shot the one in the back; we took them at almost the same time.

I haven't found anything that will stop that bullet.
My first shot on that bison, I saw snow and dirt kick up behind it. I asked my guide "Was I high?"
His answer was: "Nope. You went right through her."

Pigs and sheep in Hawaii didn't stand a chance of stopping that bullet.

Great looking gun Jim. What's the story behind this one?

Tfrick
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Thursday, November 06, 2025, 07:21 (31 days ago) @ Jim Taylor

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The 41

Jim Taylor
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Thursday, November 06, 2025, 08:41 (31 days ago) @ Tfrick

Back in the late '90's a good friend and fellow Shootist Jack Pender lost the battle with cancer. He requested that John Taffin and I do his funeral, which we did. After the service his son came to us and handed each of us a sixgun, saying, “Dad wanted you to have these.”

The gun he handed me was the Bowen-built .41 Magnum. Jack never had the chance to fire it after it was was built. I was humbled by the gift, to say the least. Jack had sent Bowen a stainless steel worn .44 Magnum Super Blackhawk and requested him to rebuild the gun into a .41 Magnum. The gun was rebuilt from the smallest part on up. New internals carefully fitted; a “3rd screw” in the frame that located a buffer to keep the cylinder bolt from being slammed into the frame when the gun was cocked rapidly; a line-bored cylinder, Bowen's own hand-made barrel that tapered three directions which he calls an “ovate rib.” The barrel was Taylor-Throated. And it was all topped off with Bowen's own design sights. For looks he slotted the trigger and bolt pin to match the hammer screw and the buffer screw. The cylinder pin has a lock screw through it also and will not loosen under recoil.

I had never had a .41 so I set about getting ammo, loading dies, bullets, molds and all the things you need! I soon discovered this was one of the most accurate sixguns I had ever fired! From a rest at 25 yards I fired 5-shot groups that were just over 1/2” center to center! And at 110 yards, sitting down, leaning against a fence post and holding the gun between my knees I shot a 5-shot group that measured 3 3/32” center to center!

I soon discovered I did not care for the Super Blackhawk grip and trigger guard. I sent the gun to Milt Morrison of Qualite' Pistol and Revolver and had him change it to the Ruger Bisley gripframe, trigger and hammer. That made it much nicer for me. Personal preference goes a long way towards being comfortable.

I had Gary Reeder make a new cylinder after I bulged a bolt-stop with some factory loads. (another story) and I had him change the trigger to his “set back” trigger that stays at the rear of the trigger guard instead of coming so far forward as the Ruger New Model trigger does. I really dislike the New Model triggers. The durn things sound like a cap pistol when you dry-fire them. And on heavy recoiling sixguns, the trigger coming forward after firing always took a chunk off my trigger finger! The “set back” trigger cures that. And the stocks on the gun were made by Paul Persinger are of Ebony and are hand-checkered. Paul does excellent work.

Thanks Jim! Fun story for sure.

Tfrick
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Thursday, November 06, 2025, 08:47 (31 days ago) @ Jim Taylor

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It is my Number 1 hunting gun!

Jim Taylor
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Thursday, November 06, 2025, 10:20 (31 days ago) @ Tfrick

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With such provenance have you ever logged the game and hunts

Tfrick
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Thursday, November 06, 2025, 12:06 (31 days ago) @ Jim Taylor

that 41 has accomplished?

Not all of them ... I have photos of most

Jim Taylor
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Thursday, November 06, 2025, 12:18 (31 days ago) @ Tfrick

Here's a few

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Thanks Jim! A fun trip down memory lane.

Tfrick
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Thursday, November 06, 2025, 13:12 (31 days ago) @ Jim Taylor

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