I can't afford it, and I can't live without it. Someone save me from myself, please. It's on the way. This is a BSW (Made by Simson) 16/8X57JR with a good post war 2.5-8 variable in claws with a second set of 16/16 barrels.
Hunt with Class and Classics
Acquit v. t. To render a judgment in a murder case in San Francisco... EQUAL, adj. As bad as something else. Ambrose Bierce “The Devil's Dictionary”
One day as a kid I took 7 chukar, 15 quail, and a big 4X4 mulie, all with a 12/12/30-30 drilling. We once had great hunting here in NW Nevada but no longer.
Hunt with Class and Classics
Acquit v. t. To render a judgment in a murder case in San Francisco... EQUAL, adj. As bad as something else. Ambrose Bierce “The Devil's Dictionary”
I always drool when I look at double rifles. I almost bought a Holland and Holland 450-500 BPE at a collectors show in Dallas last year. It was a gorgeous hammer gun, but that cartridge wouldn’t be fun for the smaller animals we have in Montana.
So what is the 8X57R? I’m assuming it is the German 8mm Mauser, with a rim. Mine was a 7X57R which is the same as the 7X57 with a rim…
Yep, its all but the same. My 8x57R even has a little dohickey that lets me use rimless 8x57's. About the only way to make that more perfect would be to make the barrels up and down instead of sideways. Dang, that's nice! Always wished I had a pair of shot barrels for mine. Bfly
Be nice and work hard, you never have enough time or friends.
I always drool when I look at double rifles. I almost bought a Holland and Holland 450-500 BPE at a collectors show in Dallas last year. It was a gorgeous hammer gun, but that cartridge wouldn’t be fun for the smaller animals we have in Montana.
So what is the 8X57R? I’m assuming it is the German 8mm Mauser, with a rim. Mine was a 7X57R which is the same as the 7X57 with a rim…
It's JR, and that's the older .318 diameter bore, although most of the JR guns have .320-.321 bores in fact. The modern 8 Mauser rimmed is the 8X57JRS, a hotter load than the JR and with the .323 bullet. JB got my JRS drilling a while back. I believe he uses it for grouse hunting in grizzly country.
BF, the dohickey in the edge of the rifle extractor was not uncommon between the wars, when correct ammo was hard to come by after WWI. The .321 bores were common so hunters could shoot military 8mm S-bore rimless ammo; it was a compromise bore.
Hunt with Class and Classics
Acquit v. t. To render a judgment in a murder case in San Francisco... EQUAL, adj. As bad as something else. Ambrose Bierce “The Devil's Dictionary”
I always drool when I look at double rifles. I almost bought a Holland and Holland 450-500 BPE at a collectors show in Dallas last year. It was a gorgeous hammer gun, but that cartridge wouldn’t be fun for the smaller animals we have in Montana.
So what is the 8X57R? I’m assuming it is the German 8mm Mauser, with a rim. Mine was a 7X57R which is the same as the 7X57 with a rim…
I'd love to see that 7X57R, shrap. I tend to drool a bit, also. That 450-500 should have followed you home, IMO. Lots of guys use 45-70s, on up. Why not the BPE?
Hunt with Class and Classics
Acquit v. t. To render a judgment in a murder case in San Francisco... EQUAL, adj. As bad as something else. Ambrose Bierce “The Devil's Dictionary”
I always drool when I look at double rifles. I almost bought a Holland and Holland 450-500 BPE at a collectors show in Dallas last year. It was a gorgeous hammer gun, but that cartridge wouldn’t be fun for the smaller animals we have in Montana.
So what is the 8X57R? I’m assuming it is the German 8mm Mauser, with a rim. Mine was a 7X57R which is the same as the 7X57 with a rim…
I'd love to see that 7X57R, shrap. I tend to drool a bit, also. That 450-500 should have followed you home, IMO. Lots of guys use 45-70s, on up. Why not the BPE?
I have bought so many guns that I have to quit. A gun as big in caliber as that isn’t pleasant to shoot all day and I like shooting my rifles a lot. I can spend a whole week in the prairie dog fields shooting varmint rifles with no discomfort. Recoil isn’t something I want to deal with that much.
I see how many guys buy and build big game guns and cartridges to sight in and shoot a handful of times during the year and it doesn’t make sense, so I stick with the varmint calibers so I can shoot them a lot…
I always drool when I look at double rifles. I almost bought a Holland and Holland 450-500 BPE at a collectors show in Dallas last year. It was a gorgeous hammer gun, but that cartridge wouldn’t be fun for the smaller animals we have in Montana.
So what is the 8X57R? I’m assuming it is the German 8mm Mauser, with a rim. Mine was a 7X57R which is the same as the 7X57 with a rim…
I'd love to see that 7X57R, shrap. I tend to drool a bit, also. That 450-500 should have followed you home, IMO. Lots of guys use 45-70s, on up. Why not the BPE?
I have bought so many guns that I have to quit. A gun as big in caliber as that isn’t pleasant to shoot all day and I like shooting my rifles a lot. I can spend a whole week in the prairie dog fields shooting varmint rifles with no discomfort. Recoil isn’t something I want to deal with that much.
I see how many guys buy and build big game guns and cartridges to sight in and shoot a handful of times during the year and it doesn’t make sense, so I stick with the varmint calibers so I can shoot them a lot…
When I still had a use for my 416 Rigby I loaded inexpensive Speer 350gr bullets and whacked coyotes with it. It was good training and kept me familiar with the gun. Would I do it now? In a word hell no. I see your point...but...
Hunt with Class and Classics
Acquit v. t. To render a judgment in a murder case in San Francisco... EQUAL, adj. As bad as something else. Ambrose Bierce “The Devil's Dictionary”
Great gun (you can't call it a rifle, can you?). I have an "export model" BSW 12 guage double, a plain field gun with 29+" barrels choked "full and fuller" the way the Germans used to like 'em. Made in Berlin, of course, just before WWII and exported to a gunshop in Salonika, Greece and marked with their name. 2 3/4" "export" chambers instead of the shorter ones used on many of the guns for the domestic German market.
A "former Yugoslavian" neighbor of mine really likes it--he says "good for shooting a duck or a Duke!". (You might guess at his political persuasion from this....).
BSW has an ugly history, but they made beautiful guns and I don't hold a gun's history against it, especially when it performs as well as BSWs do.
Hope you enjoy yours as much as I have mine, now that I've learned to load "spreaders"!
Was Mike Armstrong. Got logged off; couldn't log back on. RE-registered my old call sign, Mesa. FNG. Again. Mike Armstrong
I would love to see a pic of that BSW of yours, Mesa. The one coming is a plain-Jane, also, but the fit and workmanship of the two other BSW guns I've seen were excellent. The Germans would tolerate no less.
They used the Anson & Deeley action design, which I think is stronger and more reliable than a Blitz action, at least where the wood to receiver fit is concerned. The A&D is far less prone to wood cracking.
Hunt with Class and Classics
Acquit v. t. To render a judgment in a murder case in San Francisco... EQUAL, adj. As bad as something else. Ambrose Bierce “The Devil's Dictionary”
I shot the 16 SXS like it was made for me, and I was made for it.
The rifle groups well but shoots S&B factory fodder 196gr way high, 10-12" to the open sights at 75 yards. I have 150 ea Barnes Originals 150 gr .318 bullets on the way from a friend in OK. I'll speed those up as fast as I think the little gun can handle and see if that helps. The scope shot even a little higher.
Obviously, the old traditional loading isn't the ticket
Thanks, Paul. I appreciate your finding the 150s.
Hunt with Class and Classics
Acquit v. t. To render a judgment in a murder case in San Francisco... EQUAL, adj. As bad as something else. Ambrose Bierce “The Devil's Dictionary”