Please forgive my ignorance…when you say bore diameter is that the diameter of the bullet such as .509 and .510 which is what my other 500 NE used?
It just says it was regulated with 570 soft points with Kynoch bullets in the 500 3 inch NE at 60 yardsWhat’s your bore diameter?
DGS / DGX
tBBC / TBS
A-frame
It just says it was regulated with 570 soft points with Kynoch bullets in the 500 3 inch NE at 60 yards
Whoa!
View attachment 491292HARTMANN & WEISS CUSTOM BY RAUCH DOUBLE SQUARE BRIDGE MAGNUM TAKE-DOWN MAGAZINE RIFLE .505 GIBS
HARTMANN & WEISS CUSTOM BY RAUCH DOUBLE SQUARE BRIDGE MAGNUM TAKE-DOWN MAGAZINE RIFLE .505 GIBS for sale online.www.gunsinternational.com
An update on this good gun deal. It was a bargain at $60,000 based upon advertised facts. A savvy buyer on this forum made an offer that was accepted and he was smart enough to put in a clause "conditional upon verification from Hartman & Weis that this is indeed one of their rifles".
Guess what? It's misrepresented. It isn't a Hartman & Weis, it's a gun made by outworkers and former employees of Hartman & Weis. Value? $25,000 on the high end. It's the kind of gun you buy for $12,000 as a deal and use as a super fine working gun with no collector value whatsoever.
Kudos to the savvy buyer that used a "Trust but Verify" approach to the deal, thus saving himself from a $35,000-$48,000 loss on the gun.
Are there any Hartman & Weis markings on the gun?
So my Swift A Frames that I have in SP are different from your above referenced A-frame?My answer is correct in that case. You need 570gr round nose bullets. Beyond woodleigh, your choices are:
DGS / DGX
tBBC / TBS
A-frame
Not sure. But either way, best grade gun made by their employees off-hours marked or unmarked, its not a H&W.
There are dozens of Purdeys, H&Hs, Griffin & Howes, and other best guns made by off-hours workers to the highest standard. Nonetheless, a truck load of them and $9 will get you a pumpkin spice latte.
I’m an idiot. I meant in my first message to say A-Frame not A-Square!!! So my A-Frames are good to go. Thanks for your patience!!!So my Swift A Frames that I have in SP are different from your above referenced A-frame?
Unless the ad has been changed, it does say by Rauch. It is easy to miss that part though.An update on this good gun deal. It was a bargain at $60,000 based upon advertised facts. A savvy buyer on this forum made an offer that was accepted and he was smart enough to put in a clause "conditional upon verification from Hartman & Weis that this is indeed one of their rifles".
Guess what? It's misrepresented. It isn't a Hartman & Weis, it's a gun made by outworkers and former employees of Hartman & Weis. Value? $25,000 on the high end. It's the kind of gun you buy for $12,000 as a deal and use as a super fine working gun with no collector value whatsoever.
Kudos to the savvy buyer that used a "Trust but Verify" approach to the deal, thus saving himself from a $35,000-$48,000 loss on the gun.
So my Swift A Frames that I have in SP are different from your above referenced A-frame?
An update on this good gun deal. It was a bargain at $60,000 based upon advertised facts. A savvy buyer on this forum made an offer that was accepted and he was smart enough to put in a clause "conditional upon verification from Hartman & Weis that this is indeed one of their rifles".
Guess what? It's misrepresented. It isn't a Hartman & Weis, it's a gun made by outworkers and former employees of Hartman & Weis. Value? $25,000 on the high end. It's the kind of gun you buy for $12,000 as a deal and use as a super fine working gun with no collector value whatsoever.
Kudos to the savvy buyer that used a "Trust but Verify" approach to the deal, thus saving himself from a $35,000-$48,000 loss on the gun.
That AH member can thank AH (and you most likely) profusely! Very good on spotting this eventuality!
How does a longer bullet damage the rib and wedge? I was always under the assumption that the problem with monos was damaging the rifling?No, an A-frame is a standard soft. You’re fine with that. But your solids selection is limited. It must be a copper gilded steel jacketed lead core bullet. That means you can have Hornady DGS, or Federal Trophy Bonded Sledgehammer, or Woodleigh Weldcore. It has to be soft enough to properly engrave and it has to be lead core to keep its volumetric size low. (All copper means bigger volume, which means longer, which means it will damage the ribs and the regulating wedge)
How does a longer bullet damage the rib and wedge? I was always under the assumption that the problem with monos was damaging the rifling?
I had no idea about the bent barrels!Monos are very hard and very long, 22.5% larger by volume for equal weight lead. Double rifle barrels are bent. A long bullet will straighten the barrels (destroy them) on a double rifle that is of vintage construction with soldered ribs. They also can have bands deeper than the shallow rifling, or the alloy can damage softer steel rifling, or they can cause a pressure spike due to a tight spot in a vintage barrel.
A hundred reasons not to shoot them in a vintage or best gun. Lead core FMJ solids are the way, and even then you just want too shoot those as infrequently as possible and practice with softs.
I had no idea about the bent barrels!