juan pablo pozzi
AH veteran
I can testify the quality of Chapuis thanks to the late Don Heath aka Ganyana. We shot literally hundreds of Norma ph trough it without issues.
great points... i used same logic in late 1980s and early 90s with the .300 win mag. i loved and miss my German made Roy Weatherby mark 5, but ammo was not available at any cost most small town and x roads hardware-everything store where i hunted out west.I love the idea. For better or for worse I’m married to the .375 H&H and 45-70. Albeit for reasons that are born purely out of personal experience. In Alaska every store from Delta Junction to Seward to Fairbanks and in every village burger/barber/shower and hardware store is sure to have those two calibers. Without a doubt.
I tend to take ammo availability into account when buying a new rig.
I would enthusiastically support this move as long as it was built tough. I’d love to have a work double for Alaska, get it wet, and drop it in the pelican for Africa.
I my humble opinion, stick with your original thoughts as far as caliber goes.All,
As some of you know, I manage a brand of double rifles (Chapuis). I am kicking around some ideas for 2026 new product introductions. One of them is to offer a basic model with no engraving, 2-star wood and no special finish, that would retail for less than $10,000 in 2026.
The calibers I'm thinking about are .375 H&H and .45-70. Configuration would be the same as my African doubles (large action, 26" barrels, express sights, double triggers, ejectors, manual safety).
Why the .45-70? Because with it, hunters could also use it here in the US, especially in states that allow straight-wall cartridges for big game. Why no .450-400 and .470? Because doing so would necessarily cannibalize from my other two lines, the Iphisi and the Elan Classic & Artisan, which are selling well.
Also, I'm thinking of including mounts for RMR red dots on all my African-sized doubles, free of charge.
I'd like to hear your thoughts about this, as well as any suggestions you may have (realistic!) for anything else.
Thank you all in advance, as always.
very nice, thx for photo.One of my Chapuis
That is 100% my vote. Offer it in 500NE and I am a buyer in 2027. I do not want a $20k double so I am not considering one of the other models. You would absolutely gain some of the $10k-ish bolt gun market.
I get your concern for cannibalism but you would bring in far more new customers due to the price point.
Also look at marketing multiple barrel sets......eg. 450/400 NE and 9.3x74R......
That would definitely be a good one9,3x74R……
Call George at Champlin Arms and ask him what he thinks of them. George and JJ wouldn't offer a lifetime guarantee on the rifle if they weren't quality firearms!what is everyone's opinions on the action lockup of the Chapuis? I see it doesnt have a crossbolt, which concerns me