Designed in 1988, the .700 Nitro Express is a big gaming cartridge that originated in the United Kingdom. The cartridge was made in London, England by the Holland and Holland company.
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.700 Nitro Express
a .700 nitro express
There's the .700 Nitro Express.
.700 nitro express or the 4 bore
There are several, such as the .600 Nitro Express and .700 Nitro Express, not to mention anything considered a cannon.
the 700 nitro express is a beast the .700 nitro express or the 4 bore
No, the .600 Nitro Express is more powerful. Also, there is a .700 Nitro Express round that is designed for a rifle, but there is one handgun that will fire it.
"Cheap" and "700 Nitro" should not be in the same sentence. Last one I saw sold, with case and accesories, was $69,000. Before that, $79,000.
Possibly the .460 Weatherby Magnum, the .577 T-Rex, or the .700 Nitro Express.
.700 Nitro Express. Although .50 is technically the largest caliber you can legally own without an NFA destructive device permit (which California will never allow), there are exceptions for some cartridges determined to be for sporting purposes (such as the .600 Nitro Express, .577 Tyrannousaur, .700 Nitro Express, etc.). California also has a ban specifically on rifles which fire the .50 Browning Machine Gun (BMG) cartridge.
Yes, here's several. .585 Nyati, .600 Nitro Express, .700 Nitro Express, 14.5x115... then you have weapons classed as cannons (20mm and up). The .50 BMG/12.7x99 isn't even remotely close to being the largest cartridge out there.
If you take every 600 N.E. double rifle out there and average out the weight then you are probably going to get about 15 lbs. I own one (Heym Jumbo 88B) and it's snug for me, but that's just me. 600 Nitro Express is a respected cartridge all over the world. It means business when you shoot. I really don't see the point at all in the 700 Nitro Express because the 600 is my favorite and does devastating performance on game