For Sale Double Rifle L. Borovnik O/U .375 H&H

franzfmdavis

Gold supporter
AH enthusiast
Joined
Apr 27, 2024
Messages
432
Reaction score
1,575
Location
Eden Prairie, Minnesota
Media
5
Price
  • $9,500 USD
  • Payment may be made by Venmo, Zelle, check or cash (if we meet in person)
  • While I have been in the past, I am not interested in trades at the moment
Shipping
  • Buyer pays shipping and insurance to buyer's FFL
  • I am located in Eden Prairie, Minnesota
  • I am willing to export it if doing so would be compliant with all USA and destination laws
  • The gun will ship in a standard Plano hard plastic case
Other Sites
  • I have not listed the gun elsewhere for sale
Inspection Period and Guarantee
  • I would like to speak to the buyer over the phone (please PM me for my number), and would also appreciate being able show the gun to the buyer via video chat before finalizing a sale.
  • The buyer will have 3 days to decide whether he would like to keep the gun so long as it is unfired during that period.
  • If the gun has been misrepresented by me, I will reimburse buyer for all shipping costs to the buyer, and back from the buyer, as well as buyer's FFL transfer fees for receiving the gun.
  • If the buyer would like to return the gun and there has been no misrepresentation by me, buyer will pay for the return shipping/insurance to me and my $50 FFL transfer fee for re-obtaining the gun. I will reimburse buyer for the purchase price upon the return of the gun in the condition it was sent.
Description
  • Handcrafted by Ludvig Borovnik - Ferlach, Austria
  • Manufacture Date: 1961
  • SN: 1720
  • Proof #: 4581
  • Proof: Nitro
  • Overall weight: 8.4lbs
  • 24 3/8” over/under polished blued barrels, both chambered in .375 Holland & Holland Magnum
  • Bores are shinny with sharp rifling
  • Extractors
  • Highly figured high grade walnut stock and furniture
  • Three-piece field style forearm
  • Pistol grip with Monte-Carlo style raised cheek piece for right hand shooter
  • Double selective triggers (LOP Front: 13-13/16” Cocked ; LOP Rear: 12-13/16” Cocked)
  • Blitz action
  • Double Kersten locking bolts
  • Bushed firing pins
  • Manual Safety
  • Jointing is tight
  • Clean water table
  • Scalloped boxlock
  • Hand engraved deep carved game scenes with scroll (brown bear/ibex/flora)
  • Ramped front sight with notched rear sight and secondary flip up leaf
  • No scope mounts or red dot notches/cutouts
  • Sling swivel studs
  • S.W. Silver & Co. #3 red recoil pad (I replaced a brown Decelerator recoil pad and had the Silver pad put on on by a local gunsmith after I had purchased it)
Miscellaneous
  • I bought it from the son of the original owner (who had passed away)
  • The son said his dad had personally commissioned it from L. Borovnik
  • I do not have an overall round count on the gun
  • I personally fired it 16 times with different kinds factory ammunition to find one that regulated best
  • I achieved a ~4” Group offhand at 50 Yards with factory Barnes VOR-TX Safari 300g TSX FB
  • I did not develop any hand loads for it
  • I will also provide a written history of the research I did on Ferlach guns, the Borovnik house, this gun, and its proof marks
Pictures (taken 01/29/25)
  • Please see the attached pictures for the condition of the metal and the wood on the gun.
  • There are some dings in the wood and wear on the metal which I have attempted to photograph clearly
  • Please don't hesitate to let me know if you would like to see any additional pictures or video of any part of the gun

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I’ve inspected this gun in person. It’s tight on lockup, clean, and legit. I saw no functional defects and only minimal wear as reflected in the photos. Bores were excellent.

Have a look at what Ludwig Borovnik doubles are going for at Holts Auctioneers in the UK the past few years. They are definitely the most desirable of the Austrian Ferlach guns.

GLWS.
 
Perfect candidate for a set of claws. Beautiful rifle.
 
Price
  • $9,500 USD
  • Payment may be made by Venmo, Zelle, check or cash (if we meet in person)
  • While I have been in the past, I am not interested in trades at the moment
Shipping
  • Buyer pays shipping and insurance to buyer's FFL
  • I am located in Eden Prairie, Minnesota
  • I am willing to export it if doing so would be compliant with all USA and destination laws
  • The gun will ship in a standard Plano hard plastic case
Other Sites
  • I have not listed the gun elsewhere for sale
Inspection Period and Guarantee
  • I would like to speak to the buyer over the phone (please PM me for my number), and would also appreciate being able show the gun to the buyer via video chat before finalizing a sale.
  • The buyer will have 3 days to decide whether he would like to keep the gun so long as it is unfired during that period.
  • If the gun has been misrepresented by me, I will reimburse buyer for all shipping costs to the buyer, and back from the buyer, as well as buyer's FFL transfer fees for receiving the gun.
  • If the buyer would like to return the gun and there has been no misrepresentation by me, buyer will pay for the return shipping/insurance to me and my $50 FFL transfer fee for re-obtaining the gun. I will reimburse buyer for the purchase price upon the return of the gun in the condition it was sent.
Description
  • Handcrafted by Ludvig Borovnik - Ferlach, Austria
  • Manufacture Date: 1961
  • SN: 1720
  • Proof #: 4581
  • Proof: Nitro
  • Overall weight: 8.4lbs
  • 24 3/8” over/under polished blued barrels, both chambered in .375 Holland & Holland Magnum
  • Bores are shinny with sharp rifling
  • Extractors
  • Highly figured high grade walnut stock and furniture
  • Three-piece field style forearm
  • Pistol grip with Monte-Carlo style raised cheek piece for right hand shooter
  • Double selective triggers (LOP Front: 13-13/16” Cocked ; LOP Rear: 12-13/16” Cocked)
  • Blitz action
  • Double Kersten locking bolts
  • Bushed firing pins
  • Manual Safety
  • Jointing is tight
  • Clean water table
  • Scalloped boxlock
  • Hand engraved deep carved game scenes with scroll (brown bear/ibex/flora)
  • Ramped front sight with notched rear sight and secondary flip up leaf
  • No scope mounts or red dot notches/cutouts
  • Sling swivel studs
  • S.W. Silver & Co. #3 red recoil pad (I replaced a brown Decelerator recoil pad and had the Silver pad put on on by a local gunsmith after I had purchased it)
Miscellaneous
  • I bought it from the son of the original owner (who had passed away)
  • The son said his dad had personally commissioned it from L. Borovnik
  • I do not have an overall round count on the gun
  • I personally fired it 16 times with different kinds factory ammunition to find one that regulated best
  • I achieved a ~4” Group offhand at 50 Yards with factory Barnes VOR-TX Safari 300g TSX FB
  • I did not develop any hand loads for it
  • I will also provide a written history of the research I did on Ferlach guns, the Borovnik house, this gun, and its proof marks
Pictures (taken 01/29/25)
  • Please see the attached pictures for the condition of the metal and the wood on the gun.
  • There are some dings in the wood and wear on the metal which I have attempted to photograph clearly
  • Please don't hesitate to let me know if you would like to see any additional pictures or video of any part of the gun

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Beautiful rifle, great pics!
 
Any regulation targets, ammo preferences?
It does not have a factory regulation target. I’m not sure if they did that back in 1961, but if so, the prior owner did not give it to me with the gun.

The factory ammo that I shot best with was Barnes VOR-TX Safari 300g TSX FB.
 
Last edited:
I would like to make one correction to the description in the original post above. The weight of the gun is actually 8 lbs 12 oz (not 8.4). I had a mistaken reported the weight in the original description and used my luggage scale (hooked on the sling loop) to confirm the accurate weight. I have attached a picture for verification.

IMG_0165.jpeg
 
That has to be one of the most informative adds yet, I think it is a great service for the prospective buyer to have so many high resolution pictures present and also going in detail of all defects, small as they are there is no less a good service of you to show them in such detail. Good luck with the sale.
 
Lovely looking rifle, and from a great maker. This should prove to be a very accurate double rifle. And double triggers as well!

Only thing really missing is German claw or pivot mounts. But a top notch rifle maker can handle this easily.
 
The factory ammo that I shot best with was Barnes VOR-TX Safari 300g TSX FB.
This is a great rifle from a respected maker!

How was the regulation with the Barnes VOR-TX Safari 300g TSX FB that you shot?
1. Do you have a target to show the top to bottom and left to right strike of the bullets from top and bottom barrels?
2. Had the bullets crossed in flight at 50, 70, or 100 yards or whatever range you tested the rifle at?

Thanks in advance!
 
Thanks @Mark A Ouellette

Here’s a picture of a test target from this last summer when I was testing different factory bullets.

The two shots closest to the bullseye were with the Barnes TSX 300g at 50 yards. I noted that on the right side of target. However, I unfortunately didn’t note which hole was associated with which barrel.

IMG_0177.jpeg
 
Last edited:
That has to be one of the most informative adds yet, I think it is a great service for the prospective buyer to have so many high resolution pictures present and also going in detail of all defects, small as they are there is no less a good service of you to show them in such detail. Good luck with the sale.
I appreciate that! I used all of the allowable space for pictures that I was able too :)
 
I frequently get interested in the history of a gun I get, and then I research it and organize the information I find. For anyone who is interested in this sort of this, here is the historical information I had gathered on this builder of this gun:

Handcrafted in Ferlach

This Ludwig Borovnik Sporting Double Rifle was handcrafted in the Ferlach region of Austria.

Some people mistakenly believe that Ferlach is a trademark – it is not. Rather, Ferlach is a small village where a gun guild was started as early as 1558.

Ferlach (in Slovene: Borovlje) is the southernmost town in Austria, about 17 km south of the Carinthian capital Klagenfurt. It is situated in the Rosental Valley of the Drava River, at the base of the northern slope of the Karawanken mountain range. Just south of these mountains is the country of Slovenia.

Thanks to the nearby natural resources of iron and timber, water from rivers cascading down the Karawanken mountains and an already well-established workforce of skilled iron- and metalworkers, a weapon industry evolved that would soon become world famous. Nowhere else on earth is such a collection of gun-smithing talent as there is in this little town in southern Austria. Neither is there anything that compares to the gun-smithing school (Höhere Technische Bundeslehranstalt Ferlach) where a young man or woman at the age of 15 to 16 can enter a four-year course in firearm design that makes it possible to build a rifle from scratch with hand tools and graduate with a four-year degree, or five-year course in engineering. Upon completion of the four- or five- year course a graduate can build a rifle, any rifle, be it sidelock, boxlock, double rifle, over-and-under, drilling, bolt-action, side-by-side – you name it – with any stock design and then engrave it or provide inlays of gold or silver. If any gunsmith in the U.S. can compete with the average graduate of Ferlach’s gun-smithing school, there is a good chance he graduated from Ferlach.

The history of the town is depicted in its coat of arms: it features a tree, bee cone, two crossed silver nails and a rifle. Since the 15th century, Ferlach was known for its firearms manufacturers, the main armorer of the Habsburg Monarchy.

In the sixteenth century, it was absolutely necessary that all the people involved in fabricating a firearm were located together in close proximity. This enabled the barrel maker, the stock maker, and the lock mechanism maker to work together closely to ensure that everyone was performing their task(s) correctly, effectively and efficiently.

In 1558, Holy Roman Emperor Ferdinand I (who was also the King of Bohemia and the King of Hungary and Croatia) assigned 100 gunsmiths from the Habsburg Netherlands to Ferlach for the purpose of producing arms. According to legend, two Schaschl brothers left Liege, Belgium and were the first to settle in Ferlach to start a gun factory, which was in operation until 1818.

Subsequently, during the 30-Year-War (1618 – 1648) arms production in Ferlach went through its first “boom” and capacity expanded. Weapons from Ferlach soon became renowned throughout Europe based on a strict quality control which has been practiced since 1631 is the foundation of the town's enduring success.

As the individual skills became better and more refined, more and more firearms were manufactured. Eventually, individual gunsmiths began to put their name on the barrel or frame of those guns which they had either manufactured solely or with the help of their fellow Ferlach craftsmen.

Since all Ferlach firearms are essentially hand-made per individual special order, very few are exactly alike. In the past, the gunsmiths of Ferlach have produced almost every type of shoulder arm imaginable, including such modern weapons as superposed and juxtaposed rifles and shotguns, hammerless drillings, repeating rifles, 3 barrel rifles, combination guns, four-barrel combination guns (called vierlings), hammer guns of every type, etc. Some of these specimens represent the highest refinement in the gun-makers trade.

In 1946, there were 56 gunsmith companies in Ferlach (at one time there had been over 100), but the numbers dropped continuously.

By 1989 only 16 gunsmiths remained and in 2008 only seven active gunsmiths continued producing guns, although this number has increased slightly in the last few years.

Most guns manufactured in Ferlach today are by individual special order with a wide range of calibers/gauges and other special features and options. As of this writing, these existing gunsmiths in alphabetical order appear to be: Ludwig Borovnik (1848), Johann Fanzoj (1790), Wilfried Glanznig, Josef Hambrusch (the oldest firm beginning in 1752), Karl Hauptmann, Christian Hausmann, Gottfried Juch, Josef Just, Jakob Koschat, Peter Michelitsch, Johann & Walter Outschar and Herbert Scheiring. Legendary firms that are no longer in business include Josef Winkler, Franz Sodia and Johann Sigott. Top engravers who have lived in Ferlach and who work on individual pieces for the gun-makers have included such names as Mack, Krondorfer, Orou, Schaschle, Singer, Maurer, Widmann, Stogner, de Florian, Plucher and Oblitschnig.

Each of the master gun-makers does some things a little differently from the other and they might also offer some things, which the other gun-makers do not. All use Böhler Antinit, Böhler Blitz and Böhler Super Blitz steel, which are so strong that they allow the thickness of the barrels to be reduced, thus reducing the final weight of the weapon.

The gun-makers also make their own actions (with the exception of bolt-action rifles). They tend to be a little secretive about some of their processes and methods of manufacture, even from each other. A customer, who decides to visit Ferlach to have a gun made, should allow a week in the village to visit every gun-maker, if the client has not already picked out a gun-maker.

Ferlach received town privileges in 1930 and today remains a center for the production of hunting rifles.

Currently the town has 7,377 inhabitants.

The Ferlach Guild (Genossenschaft) represented most of Ferlach’s gun-makers until it was dissolved in 2004.

Current prices reportedly range from $25,000 to $500,000 per piece, which take six to ten months to produce; at the higher end, production can take two years.

Only Beretta has been making guns longer than Ferlach.

The gun-making industry in Ferlach brings in $8,500,000 to $10,000,000 to the town annually.

The House of Ludwig Borovnik

The house that manufactured this gun is Ludvig Borovnik. Today, Ludwig Borovnik’s shop in Ferlach is: Ludwig Borovnik KG, Präzisionsjagdwaffen Gewehrschäfte Aller Art, at Bahnhofstrasse 7.

The Borovnik family looks back on a long history. The name Borovnik has developed out of the name of the town of Borovlje and, translated from the Slavic, means “from Ferlach”.

In 1848, Ludwig Borovnik I turned his passion into a career and set up business as an independent gunsmith. The company that he founded was later taken over by his son, Ludwig Borovnik II, and remained a small, family-run enterprise well into the 1930s.

The first period of prosperity for the business under the leadership of Ludwig Borovnik II started in 1890. Just before the turn of the century, the company employed more than 50 gunsmiths who manufactured hunting weapons. Four product catalogues in two languages were sent out every year, describing the company´s extensive range of weapons, ammunition and hunting accessories.

In 1925, Ludwig Borovnik III was born and enjoyed a happy, carefree childhood with his parents and two sisters.

However, by 1942 the Borovnik family began living through their darkest hours. On 14/04, 1942, the family fortunes were undone by their mother tongue and patriotism. In the dead of night, all members of the family were deported to Germany on cattle wagons by National Socialist henchmen.

After the end of the war in 1945, the family returned to Carinthia and found it in ruins. Just a few years later, Ludwig Borovnik II died of ill health that had never improved since his return from Germany. It was now down to his son to prove himself worthy of the role of head of the family and to rebuild the business from scratch.

Starting in 1950, Ludwig Borovnik III made use of his language skills to import and sell on timber from Yugoslavia. Having got the business off to a good start, he was the first one in Ferlach to start trading stock wood and rose to become one of Europe´s largest walnut wood traders.

In 1960, Ludwig Borovnik III first met passionate hunter Helmut Horten and his wife Heidi. Their relationship should blossom into a friendship and business partnership that would last 25 years. A great many hunting trips to Yugoslavia were organised, facilitated by Ludwig Borovnik III\\u2019s excellent relations to Marshal Tito, giving rise to hunting adventures that remain unforgettable to this day.

In 1986, Ludwig Borovnik IV joined the business and continues to head it proudly and respectfully to this day.

In 2001, Ludwig Borovnik IV received Juan Carlos de Borbon, King of Spain, in his rooms. The King personally inspected the guns that had been ordered for him and was delighted with the manufacturing and precise handiwork of the guns.

In 2010, the Ferlach gunsmithing industry, and therefore also the Borovnik company, was included in the UNESCO list of intangible cultural heritage an important step towards protecting the outstanding reputation of their craftsmanship for future generations.
 

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