.22 Savage Hi-Power

The .22 Savage Hi-Power cartridge (aka: 5.6×52mmR) was created by Charles Newton and introduced by Savage Arms in 1912. It was designed to be used in the Savage Model 99 hammerless lever action rifle. It is based upon the .25-35 Winchester cartridge necked down to accept a .227in/.228in diameter bullet. Its original loading was a 70 grain soft point bullet with a velocity of about 2790 feet per second.[2]

.22 Savage Hi-Power
.22 Savage Hi-Power (center) with .223 Rem (left) and .308 Win (right).
TypeRifle
Place of originUnited States
Production history
DesignerCharles Newton
ManufacturerSavage Arms
Norma (company)
Sellier & Bellot
Wolf Ammunition
Produced1912
Variants.22 Marciante Blue Streak[1]
Specifications
Parent case.25-35 Winchester
Case typeBottleneck, Rimmed
Bullet diameter.228 in (5.8 mm)
Neck diameter.254 in (6.5 mm)
Shoulder diameter.362 in (9.2 mm)
Base diameter.423 in (10.7 mm)
Rim diameter.506 in (12.9 mm)
Case length2.05 in (52 mm)
Overall length2.51 in (64 mm)
Rifling twist12
Primer typelarge rifle
Ballistic performance
Bullet mass/type Velocity Energy
70 gr (5 g) 3,100 ft/s (940 m/s) 1,493 ft⋅lbf (2,024 J)
Source(s): Barnes, Frank C. "Cartridges of the World." Digest Books, Inc. 3rd Edition: 1972

History and description

400 pound Tiger taken by Reverend H. R. Caldwell using a Savage Model 99 chambered for .22 Savage Hi-Power

The .22 Savage Hi-Powers relatively high velocity for the time and "shocking" power led to an initial surge of popularity, and was attributed with almost magical killing powers even on large and dangerous soft-skinned game such as tigers. Reverend H. R. Caldwell used his .22 Savage Hi-Power on 400 pound tigers in China with success, something the Savage rifle company exploited in its advertising for the cartridge in the early days. The famous elephant hunter WDM Bell used a .22 Savage Hi-Power to kill Cape buffalo in West Africa in the 1920s, and reported in his magazine articles that the cartridge was popular at that time for red deer stalking in Scotland. While it was used in the UK on deer as large as Red Stags, it fell out of favour as a big game cartridge due to its small caliber and light bullets. As time went on, other .22 centerfire cartridges outstripped it in performance such as the .220 Swift, and with the advent of the .223 Remington in the 1960s, the cartridge was considered obsolete.[3] Today it is regarded as a vintage round, and aficionados use it for small game hunting in similar applications as the .223 Remington; although it is used for deer hunting where it is legal to do so. In Europe the cartridge is still chambered in drillings and similar combination guns, and the cartridge is still used by hunters for smaller European deer species such as Roe deer.

RWS 5,6x52R cartridge base

As of 2007, the .22 Savage Hi-Power is no longer made in the United States. In Europe, the .22 Savage Hi-Power is called the "5.6×52mmR", and it's still made by RWS,[4] Norma, Sellier & Bellot, and Wolf Ammunition, and exported to the U.S. market.

Notes

gollark: It apparently makes brute force take O(sqrt n) time somehow.
gollark: Yes, something something grover's algorithm.
gollark: This is... interesting. I would run it through some sort of automatic formatter tool.
gollark: These are designed to work best on general purpose CPUs - to prevent using dedicated hardware to accelerate bruteforce - and to have a tunable time requirement.
gollark: But this doesn't really mean much. Sanely designed systems now will be using stuff like scrypt/bcrypt/argon2.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.