Alrighty then
I have two rifles that might be of interest to receive a critique, I do not have much more information than what I list below, but with a visit to the store, I could obtain more info of course:
An FN Mauser K98 in .375H&H with a scope, with an asking price of 1400€
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A Dumoulin Centurion in 7x64 with a Zeiss scope, with an asking price of 3150€
View attachment 441795
The first one, might clean up to be a nice workhorse .375H&H, while the second one would be a close to perfect stalking and high seat rifle for Europe.
Looking forward to your comments
V.
Great guns you've posted for contrast
@VertigoBE . There are things that are wrong with the guns that effect value, so lets discuss them.
The first gun, the FN Mauser in 375HH was built for european, not african tastes. Please note how high the optic is in relation to the gun's action. Usually, you see this on older mausers becasue the flag safety needs to clear the scope. However, with the FN, it has its safety on the side adjacent the bolt handle so the reason the scope is so high is the dimensions of the exit objective lens. As such, the gun will kick like a mule and will not come to the eye for rapid target acquisition. The tradeoff is that it will have superior light gathering for hunting boar in twilight. That was the devil's bargain. The price of 1400EUR / $1575 USD reflects these problems. Redoing the claw mounts and a new optic would add $3500 to the cost of the gun so it doesn't make sense. Hence, its in the camp of being low-priced because it has design issues that merit discount. Nothing structurally wrong with an FN 98 in 375HH, but I'd pass on this example as you're paying a surcharge for mounts and optics you'd rather not have on such a gun.
Deal level: low to low-moderate (***assuming competently looked over for any latent defects or hidden repairs in person)
The second gun is a Dumoulin Belgian mauser. Dumoulin made tons of guns and our American readers will recognize them in the USA as being sold under Montgomery Wards, Sears, and JC Penney names on their utility models at $150 all the way up to high grade examples sold under the Abercrombie & Fitch brand for many thousands of dollars. Dumoulin made blue collar guns all the way up to best guns but in both cases, very high quality actions were the same. The gun is clearly built in the high grade to best grade end of the scale (can't tell the difference with one small photo) and was designed as a safari rifle. Quarter Rib. Dual Crossbolts. Perfectly executed low scope mounts and straight tube for fast target acquisition. Barrel band swivel. XXX wood. Ebony forend tip. Winchester 3-position side safety. Rose and scroll Belgian style engraving. Jeweled bolt body. German claw mounts. One standing and two folding sights. Yes, it has all the right things going on. The only design flaw I find with the gun is relatively easy to remedy: you do not want a lever release floor plate for a stalking rifle. I know removable magazines and quick-dump levers on floor plates are a point of pride for european's sentiments about safety to and from the field, but risk to function outweighs the benefit in the eyes of global and african preferences. At 3150 Euro / $3550 USD it seems to be very fairly priced.
Deal level: high-moderate to high (***assuming competently looked over for any latent defects or hidden repairs in person)
Which points out another truth of all collectible items, real estate, and firearms about "deals". The higher the price of the item, the less potential buyers that exist. Thus, when you start to go into the $3000, $5000, $10,000 guns you can find incredible deals because people won't budge with their money easily even if they can afford it. People are reckless with their money when its cheap and for those reasons, the "bad deal" .375 will probably sell long before the "good deal" 7x64. Even though the latter is only 2x the money and 40x the quality, people gravitate to cheap rather than good and buy two of the first gun and zero of the second.
Strongly recommend looking into #2 in person. Especially since it has a present-value $800 Zeiss scope that is very functional already mounted in claws.