@@RickyJr46 "some" of the guys got it to cycle "some" of the time they were running it...means its not consistently "repeat"able...and in a "Reapeater"...of all things..you want "repeatable" I suppose you can train around any trash action and become potent..but that doesnt mean its smooth. Come on now forr $5 Grand? thing should be able to be ran by a pinky finger! Action job should be like butter on glass. The thing is a piece.
@@Gunblastdotcom I just handled one today, the action is like rock sugar in watch gears. Horrible. For $5,000 in this economy? Not even close to being worth it.
Love it love it love it -- just recently shot one and the muzzle break on that thing is a beast. I thought it was really for looks so we shot it with and without the muzzle break and there was definitely a difference.
hey my brotha , great vid n content n gun there , 1 million % cool n i am a u.s. marine vet here 93' to 97' active ! , LOVE talking 2A n i will forever support ya , thanks > tom !
The ultra mag revolvers are for guys that handgun hunt but unless you know exactly what you’re doing you can hurt yourself the mega bullets work better in a long gun because you have three points of contact
They just don't seem any smaller than the 1886. Would like to see a full size 86 reciever that will withstand 65,000psi, imagine what a 50-110 would do in a platform like that.
Please people, refrain from being crybabies in the comments section regarding the price of these units. Work in American manufacturing, especially something as precise and complex as a lever action rifle, and you'll start to appreciate both the time investment and the cost of doing it. If you want to pay Brazil or Japan or Italy for a lever action, that's fine, you'll get a quality product. You just won't get the quality and accuracy and custom level of these Big Horns, and no one else on the market is offering something anywhere as durable or which chambers Linebaugh and big bore S&W magnums. Rossi R92 runs 454 Casull but it isn't the same unit as the Big Horn, not by a long shot. If you don't like the price, fine, but I doubt Gunblast, Big Horn, or people who appreciate leverguns want to read your bellyaching.
Well, I know what the different grades cost just wondering where it fits. I have several levers and something custom guns and a mint condition 35 Winchester built into 1909, truth is I hunt with the Henry 30-30 mire than anything. I'm in the timber alot. Now there are several new levers, 360 buckhammer Anda a new strait wall I think in 40 caliber m.y intrest into the 500 or even the 460 is light weight quick handling because there's something I've ran into that needs and heavy weight and I think the 50 holds 9 rounds I have a 45-70, but I do go places most people don't but it's heavy. Too long. I could easily buy it with cash, but wasn't looking at the other models and this ones seems to fit what I need, all these others are beautiful hand crafted works of art,but I'll be dragging it through hell. At 70 years old lighter is better
@@markdavidson8424 If you're looking to achieve 45-70 levels of power at moderate ranges, or in the brush country, but want higher load capacity and less weight in a lever action, then there's not a lot of options outside a Rossi R92 in 454 Casull (and deal with stout recoil with a lightweight rifle), or get some higher performance loads for the .30-30 (like Buffalo Bore 190gr) but deal with less capacity, or buy the base price Big Horn Armory in 454 Casull or 500 S&W mag, which are shorter rifles but not necessarily light weight. The .40 caliber you might be thinking about is the .400 Legend but it's a semi-auto rimless cartridge for AR-platforms. Straight wall .35 caliber option lately is the .360 Buckhammer, which only exceeds the .35 Remington performance by a very small amount. It's based on the .38-55 case (the parent of .30-30). Alternately, you could go with the venerable .45 Colt in a strong lever action and use Buffalo Bore loads (going by their firearms recommendation list under their ammo, of course). Don't underestimate the power of a good .45 Colt +p load in a carbine.
Dam good video Dam good job Boge, what a super nice rifle. I muat have order me one for Christmas as my present to my self, nothing like Lever action rifle. God Bless You and God Bless Freedom!!!
Wow, an old Rossi .45-70 cycles considerably better than that, and they cost about $450 brand new not that long ago. Can't believe those are going for $800 now, either. Ridiculous. Gun owners these days are getting gouged. As for the BHA in the review, might try sitting down a couple nights and just cycle the action a couple hundred times. Seriously; shouldn't have to, but here we are... for that kind of money, they should have a rig that does nothing but cycle actions until they're smooth enough for a customer.
That's a fine looking rifle. I'm a lever gun guy, it's really nice to see the renewed interest and development in lever guns in recent years.
I want one in a 460! Thanks for the video
For $5k that action looked anything but smooth.
thats whaat im sayying. Action looked like dogshit. Ill stick with my glass action Henry.
It must be a matter of learning the technique, because some of those guys cycled it really quickly.
@@RickyJr46 "some" of the guys got it to cycle "some" of the time they were running it...means its not consistently "repeat"able...and in a "Reapeater"...of all things..you want "repeatable" I suppose you can train around any trash action and become potent..but that doesnt mean its smooth. Come on now forr $5 Grand? thing should be able to be ran by a pinky finger! Action job should be like butter on glass. The thing is a piece.
You are correct, I was working it too slowly.
@@Gunblastdotcom I just handled one today, the action is like rock sugar in watch gears. Horrible. For $5,000 in this economy? Not even close to being worth it.
Omg 😲 I want one so bad. Big 500s&w. Ur brother Jeff so missed 😢 by all of us gun guys
Thanks.
Good stuff Boge! Thanks for posting this review.
Gorgeous
That would be one heck of a rifle for social work
Love it love it love it -- just recently shot one and the muzzle break on that thing is a beast. I thought it was really for looks so we shot it with and without the muzzle break and there was definitely a difference.
Great review. Now I want this.
Very Amazing Rifle Boge God bless you be Safe
Hear it ROAR!!!
hey my brotha , great vid n content n gun there , 1 million % cool n i am a u.s. marine vet here 93' to 97' active ! , LOVE talking 2A n i will forever support ya , thanks > tom !
Thank you for your support, and for your service to our beloved country.
I wonder what aftermarket stocks and forends you could replace that with
Why a top eject instead of a side eject is my question. Guess i will wait for a side eject to go with my x frame that is fun to shoot.
I was thinking of buying one, until you listed the price at the end!
Nice video, love the rifle, but way above my price range,wow.😮
The ultra mag revolvers are for guys that handgun hunt but unless you know exactly what you’re doing you can hurt yourself the mega bullets work better in a long gun because you have three points of contact
How much does it cost.
Damn.
They just don't seem any smaller than the 1886. Would like to see a full size 86 reciever that will withstand 65,000psi, imagine what a 50-110 would do in a platform like that.
love me some lever gunsQ but id be damned to pay 5k! ill buy my rossi's
There is an H&R handi rifle in .500 s&w for way less than 5,000$.
Admittedly, premium firearms are not for everyone. If one sees no appreciable difference, don't spend the money.
500 S&W is cool but i want one in 460 S&W big bor 😮😅
I love seeing quality guns coming out of my home state. #307pride
Between Big Horn Armory and Freedom Arms, I think ya'll are pretty much THE state for fine weaponry. In my opinion anyway.
Please people, refrain from being crybabies in the comments section regarding the price of these units. Work in American manufacturing, especially something as precise and complex as a lever action rifle, and you'll start to appreciate both the time investment and the cost of doing it. If you want to pay Brazil or Japan or Italy for a lever action, that's fine, you'll get a quality product. You just won't get the quality and accuracy and custom level of these Big Horns, and no one else on the market is offering something anywhere as durable or which chambers Linebaugh and big bore S&W magnums. Rossi R92 runs 454 Casull but it isn't the same unit as the Big Horn, not by a long shot.
If you don't like the price, fine, but I doubt Gunblast, Big Horn, or people who appreciate leverguns want to read your bellyaching.
Well, I know what the different grades cost just wondering where it fits. I have several levers and something custom guns and a mint condition 35 Winchester built into 1909, truth is I hunt with the Henry 30-30 mire than anything. I'm in the timber alot. Now there are several new levers, 360 buckhammer Anda a new strait wall I think in 40 caliber m.y intrest into the 500 or even the 460 is light weight quick handling because there's something I've ran into that needs and heavy weight and I think the 50 holds 9 rounds I have a 45-70, but I do go places most people don't but it's heavy. Too long. I could easily buy it with cash, but wasn't looking at the other models and this ones seems to fit what I need, all these others are beautiful hand crafted works of art,but I'll be dragging it through hell. At 70 years old lighter is better
@@markdavidson8424 If you're looking to achieve 45-70 levels of power at moderate ranges, or in the brush country, but want higher load capacity and less weight in a lever action, then there's not a lot of options outside a Rossi R92 in 454 Casull (and deal with stout recoil with a lightweight rifle), or get some higher performance loads for the .30-30 (like Buffalo Bore 190gr) but deal with less capacity, or buy the base price Big Horn Armory in 454 Casull or 500 S&W mag, which are shorter rifles but not necessarily light weight. The .40 caliber you might be thinking about is the .400 Legend but it's a semi-auto rimless cartridge for AR-platforms. Straight wall .35 caliber option lately is the .360 Buckhammer, which only exceeds the .35 Remington performance by a very small amount. It's based on the .38-55 case (the parent of .30-30). Alternately, you could go with the venerable .45 Colt in a strong lever action and use Buffalo Bore loads (going by their firearms recommendation list under their ammo, of course). Don't underestimate the power of a good .45 Colt +p load in a carbine.
Dam good video Dam good job Boge, what a super nice rifle. I muat have order me one for Christmas as my present to my self, nothing like Lever action rifle. God Bless You and God Bless Freedom!!!
If lying to customers is an admirable quality, BHA gets 5 stars.
4600.00 bks I'll pass I can buy 6 good bolt guns for that price 😂
looks klunky on the action.
@ 11:44 Shane Jahn has it dialed, and Ethan Giles ran it well too.
It's a tad notchy, but it's fitted and will smooth out with many thousands of rounds of use. Proper technique makes it run just fine.
I like the gun but I think the barrel should cum longer
Longer barrels are available.
Wow, an old Rossi .45-70 cycles considerably better than that, and they cost about $450 brand new not that long ago. Can't believe those are going for $800 now, either. Ridiculous. Gun owners these days are getting gouged. As for the BHA in the review, might try sitting down a couple nights and just cycle the action a couple hundred times. Seriously; shouldn't have to, but here we are... for that kind of money, they should have a rig that does nothing but cycle actions until they're smooth enough for a customer.
That is one ugly abomination of a lever rifle. John Browning would turn over in his grave if he could see it.
Fair enough. Nothing appeals to everyone.
What I thought this gun was 2,000
I'll never own that rifle.
Black Thunder? More like Black Blunder! That action is a sin. thing is a rip off & a turd.
Stick with your Air-Soft.
@@RickyJr46 the rifle sucks, everyone butthurt to admit it. Own shares in Bighorn Armory?