350 Legend
#11
Cub, can you please tell me what existing options you're talking about? Anything that compares to the Legend ballistically is a bottle neck cartridge which would be illegal in the states where it was designed. Some of these states have several cartridge restrictions besides being straight walled. Minimum bullet diameter and minimum case length are a couple other restrictions. The legend has less recoil than the .243 and much less than the 450 Bushmaster making it an ideal cartridge for youngsters and smaller framed women. I got it to play with and just maybe the PGC will allow semi auto rifles for big game soon. But for now I can use it to play with and will likely use it should I get out to Ohio to hunt deer.
#13
So if you substitute cars, planes, numerous appliances or even sodas in New York (sorry, I couldn't resist that one), would the innovations on all of these (not the sodas) to comply with newer and more stringent laws make you not buy the newer items? While I haven't read those particular states' game laws, I'm guessing their respective laws don't have some clause that states gun and ammo companies can't decide to manufacture new cartridges and rifles to comply with the new laws. Otherwise, this new cartridge would be illegal. Perhaps I'm missing something on this but it seems like a non starter. For everybody else, kudos on providing better information than the silly gun magazines which seem to think this is a 100 yard cartridge.
Last edited by CalHunter; 01-07-2020 at 09:27 PM.
#14
You're correct RR. But even though most of the factory bullets loaded for the Legend are .355" the specs are stated as .357" -.003" which make it a legal round. Some states like Michigan state that the case length shall be a minimum of 1.6". Seems like a silly restriction as it makes the .44 mag illegal. And we all know that's a decent deer round. The Maximum just makes it at 1.605" case length.
#16
Fork Horn
Join Date: Oct 2019
Posts: 454
Anything that compares to the Legend ballistically is a bottle neck cartridge which would be illegal in the states where it was designed. Some of these states have several cartridge restrictions besides being straight walled. Minimum bullet diameter and minimum case length are a couple other restrictions.
#17
Fork Horn
Join Date: Oct 2019
Posts: 454
Like I mentioned in my shower head analogy. Some states (and for a time, federal) limited the capacity of single shower heads, ostensibly to save water. How did the market respond? By building showers with multiple shower heads, thus obeying the law but nullifying the law's intended effect.
#18
Fork Horn
Join Date: Oct 2019
Posts: 454
If you're asking me personally, I do not live in such a state. For that and other reasons, this cartridge doesn't interest me, but that was never the intent of my comment.