.50-90 Sharps

.50-90 Sharps

Infobox Firearm Cartridge
name= .50-90 Sharps


caption= .50-90 Sharps cartridges
origin= USA
type= Blackpowder Rifle
service=
used_by=USA
wars=
designer= Sharps Rifle Manufacturing Company
design_date= 1872
manufacturer= Sharps Rifle Manufacturing Company
production_date=1875
number=
variants= .50-100, .50-110
is_SI_specs=
parent=.50 Basic
case_type=Rimmed, straight-taper
bullet=.512
neck=.528
shoulder=.528
base=.585
rim_dia=.663
rim_thick=
case_length=2.50
length=3.20
rifling=
primer=Large rifle

is_SI_ballistics=
bw1=365
btype1=FN
vel1=1814
en1=2668
bw2=440
btype2=FN
vel2=1749
en2=2989
bw3=550
btype3=FN
vel3=1448
en3=2561
bw4=
btype4=
vel4=
en4=
bw5=
btype5=
vel5=
en5=
test_barrel_length=
balsrc= Accurate Smokeless Powders "Accurate Smokeless Powders Loading Guide Number Two (Revised)", Book by Accurate Arms Co, Wolfe Publishing, 2000 p.368]

The .50-90 Sharps rifle cartridge is a black powder cartridge that was introduced by Sharps Rifle Manufacturing Company in 1872 as a buffalo (American bison) hunting round. The combination of a very large heavy bullet with a lot of powder made it a very effect round for large game.

Nomenclature

The cartridge is commonly called the .50-90 Sharps and is also known as one of the family of the "Big .50" It also sometimes referred to as the 2 1/2" 50. [ [http://www.chuckhawks.com/buffalo_cartridges.htm Buffalo Cartridges by Chuck Hawks] ]

Bullet diameter was typically .512" (13.004 mm) diameter. However, older black powder rounds with lead bullets are frequently loaded with a variation of bullet diameters based on which particular diameter shoots best in that particular gun. The type of rifling (grooves), bullet composition (lead/tin/alloy), etc. affect how well a particular diameter bullet will shoot.

Bullet weights ranged from convert|425|gr|g at approximately 1400 ft/s (427 m/s) to a much heavier and more powerful convert|550|gr|g at approximately 1275 ft/s (389 m/s).

History

The .50-90 was created specifically with buffalo in mind. At the time, the killing power of a cartridge could only really be altered by making a heavier bullet or increasing the powder charge. The wide variety of specialty bullets and powders was not available. The buffalo is an extremely large animal and difficult to take down reliably, thus the need for a large diameter cartridge, capable of carrying a heavier bullet, more powder, and a greater cross-section on the bullet, creating a larger hole. ["Cartridges of the World 8th Edition", Book by Frank C. Barnes, DBI Books, 1997, ISBN 0-87349-178-5 p. 140]

Billy Dixon used a Sharps .50-90 at the Second Battle of Adobe Walls in June 27 1874 to make his legendary 1538 yard shot. [ [http://www.oldwestlibrary.com/OWL/adobewalls.htm The History of Adobe Walls] ] [ [http://www.levergun.com/articles/bdixon.htm Replicating Billy Dixon's Legendary Long-Shot] ]

Today the round is almost obsolete. Ammunition is not produced by any major manufacturer. Rifles are only produced on an infrequent basis by a few companies such as Shiloh, Uberti, and C&S. The rifles are typically used for buffalo hunting and reenactments. Occasionally they are used for vintage competitions, but the heavy bullet and powder charge produce more recoil than other old-time cartridges such as the .45-70, and so are used less frequently.

References


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