See the thread JAK. Limpopo. Plains gameInteresting?
Where are you on safari and what you chasing?
See the thread JAK. Limpopo. Plains gameInteresting?
Where are you on safari and what you chasing?
Military, not type B - they had the pear shaped bolt handlesLooks like a pre war Mauser type B with the bottom metal changed tbh. Originally would have been 8mm Mauser (7.92x57). Looks a little different now though.
It's all a bit weird - but I think 7.8mm was perhaps the nominal proof bore of the old 8x57I (or J) cartridge (for the .318" bullet). In a similar way, I guess 8.8mm is the nominal proof bore for 9x57 - which is meant to take a 0.356" bullet - which the proof-mark seems to suggest was an 18g steel-jacketed one.9 x 57 is strictly a 9.3 calibre, as I am sure @alberta boy will confirm. I think it is one of his favourites.
David.
To add, but fitted with commercial oberndorf bottom metal and double set trigger. Very typical German or ferlach style build for the export market to Africa. Given the original mag box length, likely indeed 9.3x57. If so, highly unlikely it’s .318 bore, but possible. I had a commercial .318 J bore oberndorf with a .318 bore from the ‘40’s that was made to accommodate both .323 and .318 bullets alike - which was done to allow the use of older .318 ammo, and also circumvent the post war ban on .323 8x57 via the Versailles Treaty, also causing the rise in 8x60 chambered German rifles….i think…Military, not type B - they had the pear shaped bolt handles![]()
With Conetrol scope rings obviously!Gentleman, do please temper your enthusiasm for said fowling piece and remember all you need for success is anything in a Creedmoor chambering!
K
German script is a nightmare. I wonder if it's more likely to be EIR, in fact?
Double set triggers. Either one (heavy) works, or you can set that same trigger by pulling the rear trigger - by doing so you raise the trigger sear into a slot that makes the interception of the front trigger very fine - so much that when you just touch the front blade, it fires.Excuse my ignorance but why does it have 2 triggers?
Thanks for the reply.Double set triggers. Either one (heavy) works, or you can set that same trigger by pulling the rear trigger - by doing so you raise the trigger sear into a slot that makes the interception of the front trigger very fine - so much that when you just touch the front blade, it fires.
They’re marmite. Personally I’ve used them on oberndorf mausers and still prefer single blade trigger. For a bush rifle or DG rifle - downright dangerous if you get charged and you’re pulling at the wrong trigger, doing nothing at all
Interesting. The way I was taught to think about this arrangement was that in fact only the front one is the trigger - meaning that if you squeeze it the rifle will go off. It characteristically takes a very hard squeeze unless the set mechanism has been first cocked by pulling back the rear 'trigger', in which case it will be markedly lighter - but easily-adjusted with the wee screw you can see in the actual trigger.Double set triggers. Either one (heavy) works, or you can set that same trigger by pulling the rear trigger - by doing so you raise the trigger sear into a slot that makes the interception of the front trigger very fine - so much that when you just touch the front blade, it fires.