Seems like the easy solution is to just get one of each. 

The operative word here is "started." The 375 H&H, the 416 Rigby, and others (e.g. 425 Westley Richards) were developed at the dawn of the 20th century to compete with the 9.3x62 and to provide dangerous game cartridges for the newly developed Mauser action. By the end of WWI, most if not all were in the general stream of firearms commerce.I seem to recall that it started out life as a proprietary caliber.
Hartmann & Weiss will gladly build a rifle to the client's target weight (within reason). Those I have truly handled numbered exactly three. They are not easy to forget. Two were very plain (well, perhaps not the wood), but very elegant "working rifles." One was a .375 and the other a 7x64. Both seemed perfectly balanced and of perfect weight for caliber - one should expect nothing else from them. The third was a lovely, elegant single-shot falling block built around a Heeren action in 6.5x57R. I probably coveted that slim little deer rifle more than anything I have ever held. Unlike the other two it was graced with Germanic oak leaves on the action. Again, it was perfection in every way. None of them remotely needed a gun carriage.Some more points:
(1) If you don't have them already, Terry Wieland's two books on hunting rifles would be a good purchase. As I write this, I am looking at his description of walnut blanks ('Great Hunting Rifles', p.167) and how gunmakers have inflated the language and price used to describe the wood. You can see a practical example of what he describes on a certain website which allows you to configure your rifle with increasingly expensive blanks, all the way up to 'grade 11', whatever that means. I suspect that only an expert like Kevin Peacocke would be capable of discerning the differences in quality between a grade 10 and a grade 11 blank!
(2) A stroll round the Companies House website is instructive. In the most recent accounts, the annual results are:
● H&H - (2020) loss of £4.8m. An improvement over 2019, when the loss was £10.75m.
● Purdey - (2020) loss of £3.8m. (2019) loss of £4.3m.
● Westley Richards - (2020) loss of £155,000.
● Rigby - (2019) profit of £345,000
No wonder they all try and flog over-priced branded tat as well!
(3) I have always found Hartmann & Weiss bolt-action rifles very heavy. Admittedly, when I have handled them it has been without any English rifle alongside as a comparator. Unless you put a couple of dolly wheels on the stock and roll it around like field artillery it seems to me that any purchaser who takes one out to Africa is just making life unnecessarily miserable for himself.
Some more points: . . .
(2) A stroll round the Companies House website is instructive. In the most recent accounts, the annual results are:
● H&H - (2020) loss of £4.8m. An improvement over 2019, when the loss was £10.75m.
● Purdey - (2020) loss of £3.8m. (2019) loss of £4.3m.
● Westley Richards - (2020) loss of £155,000.
● Rigby - (2019) profit of £345,000
.
Here's your rifle: https://www.gunsinternational.com/g...magnum-mauser-deluxe-375.cfm?gun_id=101784326I am looking into having a bolt rifle in 375 H&H built. The rifle would be extensively used for hunting. I would like to know if you guys have any experience good or bad with Rigby Holland and Holland or Westley Richards. I have been around older and vintage Rigbys and Westley Richards but not H&H. Looking for first hand knowledge and information on newer production rifles. Thanks for any help.
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And a much better social media team at Beretta that is not turning it into a highend fashion boutique and odd photoshoots like the ones at Chanel led one were the last few months and got many a HH devotee schocked and polite comments about it removed on FB.Perhaps that’s why Chanel sold H&H to Beretta. They’re only so many Princes and Oligarchs who can afford the price.
1. Great Hunting Rifles don’t have this one but will order it.Some more points:
(1) If you don't have them already, Terry Wieland's two books on hunting rifles would be a good purchase. As I write this, I am looking at his description of walnut blanks ('Great Hunting Rifles', p.167) and how gunmakers have inflated the language and price used to describe the wood. You can see a practical example of what he describes on a certain website which allows you to configure your rifle with increasingly expensive blanks, all the way up to 'grade 11', whatever that means. I suspect that only an expert like Kevin Peacocke would be capable of discerning the differences in quality between a grade 10 and a grade 11 blank!
(2) A stroll round the Companies House website is instructive. In the most recent accounts, the annual results are:
● H&H - (2020) loss of £4.8m. An improvement over 2019, when the loss was £10.75m.
● Purdey - (2020) loss of £3.8m. (2019) loss of £4.3m.
● Westley Richards - (2020) loss of £155,000.
● Rigby - (2019) profit of £345,000
No wonder they all try and flog over-priced branded tat as well!
(3) I have always found Hartmann & Weiss bolt-action rifles very heavy. Admittedly, when I have handled them it has been without any English rifle alongside as a comparator. Unless you put a couple of dolly wheels on the stock and roll it around like field artillery it seems to me that any purchaser who takes one out to Africa is just making life unnecessarily miserable for himself.
Like what I see here. ThanksTake a look at Deloreac & Deloreac rifles before you part with your hard earned money. They make seriously fine rifles.
I have never had a London Best rifle built but have had many other customs built. Some by well known makers and some not. Unfortunately I have been disappointed more often than not. Most of the time I have sold them take a loss and move on. Sad to say I have had more satisfaction and pleasure with new or used production rifles than any thing else. Especially good vintage ones.Waffen Jung has been mentioned a couple of times in this thread, which I hasten to add for me anyway, has been one of the more interesting in some time. However, I digress. I was not familiar with that firm so I went to the Waffen Jung website (https://manufakturtjung.de/en/). The rifles shown there are breathtaking. There is a 500 Jeffery (sold, thank god) that is in a league of its own as they say. Nevertheless, I personally would be hard pressed to commit to a custom gun project in the price range we are talking about on this thread. If I was interested in spending that kind of money, I would like to see the finished product. In other words, there is an incredible number of ultra fine guns out there for sale. I would go that route myself. I am very picky. I would hate to drop 50k only to be disappointed in some minor detail. I have had several custom guns built for me over the years, but not in the "London Best" category, In fact, as I have related on another thread, I have a 404 jeffery in the works by a local custom maker who can stand with the best, but then I am personally acquainted and am involved in detail in the build. I have had, shall we say, mixed experiences with custom ordered guns.