The .45-70 round intrigues me, something about that big ol' chunk of lead just appeals to my baser "caveman" instincts, simple physics states not much can stand up to a big chunk of lead moving at moderate velocities
I was planning on trading my Yugo SKS towards a Marlin 1895G lever action and had one on 7 day hold at my gunshop, but when I went in today to make the trade, they had just taken in a near-mint-condition Marlin 39A .22 lever action, a 1980 vintage with no crossbolt safety or rebounding hammer, and a set of Williams FP peeps on it, and knowing how rare it is to find a 39A for sale in my region, let alone a proper 39A without the accursed "Lawyer-safe" nannyware crap on it, I had to move quickly, so the 39A came home with me, instead of the 95G
Anyway, while I was waiting for my NICS to clear, I found a H&R Handi in .45-70, not the Buffalo Classic, (they had two there, but they were both too expensive, and the balance seemed all wrong, too barrel heavy), the shorter barrel on this gun gave it a nice neutral balance and pointability, so I figured this would be a better gun for experimenting with the .45-70 with than the Marlin, the action looks a lot stronger than the Marlin levergun, and I should be able to load up spitzer profile bullets in it, seeing as it's a single shot, I'd really like to compare accuracy between a blunter point .45-70 bullet and a pointer bullet of equal weights....
So I put the Handi on 7-day hold, so I have time to think about it
What's the recoil like with commercial ammo in a .45-70 Handi?
I figure the Handi is an ideal platform for the .45-70, after all, if you miss your prey with a .45-70, it's probably not going to hang around for the second shot...