Recently bought this interesting vintage shotgun. W & C Scott and Son, Hammerless Hammer Shotgun. Regent St London proofed between 1875 and 1887.
External Hammers that trigger internal firing pins. Sorry about the poor pics.
Recently bought this interesting vintage shotgun. W & C Scott and Son, Hammerless Hammer Shotgun. Regent St London proofed between 1875 and 1887.
External Hammers that trigger internal firing pins. Sorry about the poor pics.
Remington 1858 caliber .44
Cogswell Travelling pistol in .75"
I shoot with both, the Cogswell takes 12 gauge slugs patched with pillow case linen. Touching it off gets your attention.
"Sixty percent of the time,it works every time"
Norway is one of the few places where antique firearms can be had dirt cheap.Its a combination of us being limited to 8 long arms for hunting and a general lack of interest in anything old.However if a firearm was made before 1891 you dont need a licence for it and you can have as many as you want.Colt peacemakers,Winchester lever actions,fancy European sporting guns etc can be shot with but you cant hunt anything with a handgun and only animals up to Roe Deer with most back powder guns.
This is because the energy required for hunting big game is for some reason calculated at 300 meters distance.Not that the government encourages anyone to shoot that far,the annual shooting test every hunter is required to pass is held at 100 meters but its to keep the back powder stuff out of the woods.I have passed the shooting test with all sorts of odd firearms just to prove a point (I once passed it with a Snider as well as a 9X19mm Pistol) you have to get 5 hits on a 30 cm target at 100 meters standing,prone,sitting or kneeling.
"Sixty percent of the time,it works every time"
Krag Jørgensen made by Steyr in 1899.
Absolute dead end of a bolt action rifle design but a triumph of complex machining.
"Sixty percent of the time,it works every time"
The Krags are just so slick in the action. The skilled tradesmen who built them are sadly gone and very few have mastered those skills since.
They used to start with a block of steel and mill off all the bits that didn't look like a rifle is a description I've heard for that kind of workmanship.
French gunmakers Dorleac and Dorleac made a beautiful sporting rifle on a Krag action , can’t find the picture at the minute
@Lucky yup seen some of their work online. pretty bloody nice
This Norwegian gunsmith has built a few nice Krag based rifles. It was the military issue rifle there back in the day so there are plenty of actions/parts available. There are enough photos to tell the story if you don't understand Norwegian
https://www.rafdal-vapen.no/customkrag-9075s.html
My NZ Carbine, pretty stoked to pick this up recently. Quite an amazing bit of kiwi history in my safe.
what is that tiny gun?
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