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Andy Cooper
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Ray Atkinson
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RAB
Enjoy the one you order! Heck it's your money, get what you want! That's the best double rifle made, the one you get!
Rusty
We band of brothers!
I understand you will be going to Africa, and in that case anything above a 375 H&H flanged will do. But if you think you might use the rifle more than 50% of the time in North America, then there are a couple of good choices that make better sence than some others.
If "I" were going to use the rifle mostly in North America, the choice would be between three chamberings. These chamberings would be the 9.3X74R on the bottom, the 450/400 3" on the top, and the medium would be a 375 H&H flanged. The 9.3X74R would be perfect for NA, while not being my first choice for the African Buffalo, or Lion, for those two, the bottom choice would be a 375 H&H flanged, and the top choice would be the 450/400 3".
The 450/400 3" is a good choice if it will be used over 50% of the time in Africa, and less so in NA. The 450/400 3" will handle anything you want to hunt any place,and is a very handy chambering for the large bears, moose, and Elk in the USA. The 500/416K is a real killer in a good double rifle, and is a dia that has plenty of bullets to choose from, but it is less useful in NA and, IMO, will kill no better than the 450/400 3". Like Ray, if I were going to buy a new double rifle to use in most places I would be hunting, then it would be a 450/400 3", in a B. Searcy, but if the 500/416 is your dream it would also be in a Searcy rifle.
Now,if you really want a rifle for Cape Buffalo, Elephant, and will only punch paper here, then the bargain is the Merkel 470NE, but eventhough the price is right on the Merkel, if you are willing to spend a little more, and don't mind a short wait (7 to 8 months)then the Searcy 470, or 500/416, would make sence!
Like any other rifle the "all around" double rifle does not exist, so you have to decide where you will use the rifle most. Will it be a specialized rifle you use only in a tight sittuation,in which case I would go 450/400 UP, or do you want a rifle you can use for deer, black bear, brown bear,moose, and elk, but still do the job on Cape buffalo, and Lion with proper loads, then IMO, there are only two choices, #1 would be the 450/400 3", and #2 would be a really fine example of a double chambered for 375 H&H flanged.
Also like Ray, I'm not thrilled about the cocking system of the Krieghoff, but if you will have only "ONE" double rifle it will be no draw back, since you will not be useing two different systems for operateing a rifle designed to get you out of a tight spot.
All this is a long winded way of saying "it's your money, and your choice" but the above are simply a list of things you may not have thought of, that are personal opinion, nothing more. Considering the price of this information, one can use it, or throw it away, also, your choice!
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..Mac >>>===(x)===>
also DUGABOY1
DUGABOY DESIGNS
Collector/trader of fine double rifles, and African wildlife art
there is no effective repelant! The only known cure is to get one! That however is probably only temporary in some cases. You want another!
Rusty
We band of brothers!
I have a Merkel 470 that has about 9 boxes of ammo through it and no problem with it being loose or off face. A friend also has one in 470 with no problems. I wonder if it is the Merkel made in 416 that is off face. Do you know the caliber of the guns Caswell was refering to.
BigB
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Ray Atkinson
Even though Ray is right about the 416 Rigby, 375 H&H and other cartridges like 458 WinMag being bad ideas in any double, it has been stated by the Merkel factory that they tested even their high pressure rimless models for 500 rounds durability on face.
One could shoot any double off face with one round of an excessive handload concoction. Do you know the true history of the Rogue River double that was so quickly messed up? And I emphasize again that it was most certainly not a Merkel, by your description alone.
Another BOGUS item in your post: The Merkel 140-A/2.0/2.1 models are chopper lump or demi-block barreled actions that cannot possibly be made from a 20 guage mono-block.
The lock mechanisms of all Anson&Deeley box lock double rifles and shotguns are basically the same. If you are saying that the lock mechanisms of the Merkel are of Merkel shotgun quality, then that is high praise. And the Merkel 140's have cocking indicators, could this be the similarity with the shotguns you think you have noticed? How many other double rifles have cocking indicators on their action sides?
I think some moron is misguiding you to protect his own commercial interests.
A Merkel 470 NE SXS will probably last as long or longer than any make, and is more durable and stronger than any pre-WWII double, of any make.
Oh yeah, glad the system is back up.
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RAB
[This message has been edited by DaggaRon (edited 05-22-2002).]
Even the finest, strongest, most-modern-in-materials double can be shot off face by one abusive cartridge, with one pull of a trigger.
You know, having learned much here, thank you, and in several decades of gun enthusiast activities, as well as being very familiar with my own Merkel 470 NE double, I am very satisfied that the Merkel 140 is ... THE STRONGEST 470 NE SXS DOUBLE ... on the market today. I beg anyone to refute that.
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RAB
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RAB
I think that the information he has given us was from George Caswell at Champlin. I know that George and JJ are not big Merkel fans.
Perhaps George could shed some light on the subject?
Rusty
We band of brothers.
Of course high pressure rounds will take their poll. Why don�t you ask them personally, and show us the results?
http://www.merkel-waffen.de/default.html
Hermann
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RAB
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RAB
My new goal is to hunt so many times for big game that my Merkel shoots off face. Now all I have to do is figure out where to get the money.
BigB
You say that "the fact that they (Merkel double rifles) exist in such high pressure chamberings supports their strength" yet in the same breath you "recommend against rimless chamberings" due to extraction complications. So, the fact that Merkel makes high pressure chamberings, in your mind, fully supports their strength, but you also think that they are in error by making them. Everyone's an expert, I guess. According to your "logic", Merkel makes the strongest gun on the planet, that no one should use. And you call me bogus. I have looked at a number of Merkel doubles, and was impressed with both the balance and the quality of the wood to metal fit. I am simply passing on what I was told and shown by Caswell. As far as how well they hold up, from what I have read here the 470's hold up fine- have yet to hear from someone with another chambering.
Our guns will out last their owners.
No other gun for so little money offers such strength: chopper lump (demi-block) barrels with Purdey double under bolts, Greener cross bolt third fastener, and properly executed side clips. It has more than a third fastener. I don't know of any 10K or less gun that is built as well, and I don't know of any gun that is superior in strength PERIOD.
I think we have made a wise selection in the 470 NE Merkel 140.
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RAB
The paradoxical aspects come about due to marketing gimmickery, catering to a niche of idiots who may never even use their double. Even Holland and Holland has been guilty of the idiocy of chambering their Royal in 458 Winchester Magnum, which quickly comes to ruin.
Beware the double rifle salesman. Get the opinion of someone who does not stand to gain financially from your purchase. Double rifle salesmen may be looking for the greater fool than themselves, or kissing a hypothetical George's ass.
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RAB
George Caswell and J.J. Perodeau have likely forgot more about double rifles of ANY make than most of us on this forum put together.
Champlin Arms has sold and worked on literally hundreds of double rifles over the years. They've seen them all, shot them all and probably worked on them all at one time or another. What there is about a Merkel that doesn't impress them would be interesting to hear.
[This message has been edited by John S (edited 05-24-2002).]
Now the truth:
What they don't like about a Merkel mostly has to do with their pocketbooks and the fact that GSI in Alabama is the exclusive importer. Nothing they can offer can touch a new Merkel 470 NE in value and quality for the money. It is a real deal.
I could scorn another double that will go unmentioned, but I have no asses to kiss or kick. Just the facts, no innuendo please.
Hopefully old George will apply himself here.
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RAB
I really liked an old 475 Jeffrey, but it got sold before I could buy it. I REALLY liked an old H&H Royal 465, but it was well beyond my price range. Same with a Rigby and a Westley Richards. I looked very hard at the Krieghoff and Merkel, but finally landed on buying a Chapuis. Still being made for me as I write this. I went through Champlin Arms to do this, and believe I was treated fairly and well.
My point? George knows more about this stuff than anyone I know, and if he says the Merkel is built a bit light,I'd have to take him seriously. At the very least, I would do additional checking before spending money I couldn't afford to spend again. And whether I agreed with him or not, he certainly earned my respect.
In all this process, I came to
At 10.7 lbs empty, I would not want it any heavier.
This exchange is not confrontational. It is correctional of Bogus Statements: BS.
Please, no more osculation of derrieres! There are already too many noses painted brown with BS around here already!
Thanks for any education or entertainment y'all can send my way.
Where's George? Out trying to sell another double rifle of course. Would that be a Chapuis?
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RAB
DaggaRon,
You know I shot a meat type hog of about 170 pounds last winter with the 470 and TB softs. It was a good heart lung shot that I thought would stop the hog in its tracks. Yet it managed to go about 30 yards. Damage was more than I expected as I did not expect the 470 to expand much. You will have fun with the 470 on hogs.
After Halloween six of us always have a Northern Wisconsin grouse hunt and pumpkin shoot. Pumpkins are cheap after halloween. Make a small hole in the top fill them with water go back 50 - 75 yards and blast away. Needless to say all the guys chose a Merkel 470 to blast away at the pumkins with. We had 2 of them with us. To a man they all thought the Merkel was quick handling, and on both paper and pumpkins easy to shoot and accurate. Of course the 470 does a good job blowing up the pumpkins.
Moral of the story is all the guns mentioned in this thread are good. Just make sure you take it out and use it. I imagine many doubles never get shot enough to ever deternine if they will shoot off face.
BigB
[This message has been edited by John S (edited 05-24-2002).]
Snowing here in Denver- springtime in the Rockies!!
I think Daggaron is right about takeing the reccomendation with a grain of salt, when the man, downing a product, has something to sell, that competes with it! I'm not saying the man would lie, but it would seem to me, he would have something to gain by turning you away from his competition. I mean lets be real about this!
He is also right about the rimless cartridges not being right in double rifles, and that doesn't have anything to do with strength, but ejection, and problematic rimless ejectors. On the other hand I don't think the Belted rimless 375 H&H, or the rimless 416 Rigby are proper for the double rifle because of pressure as well as the extraction/ejection problems. I think what Daggaron is saying here is, if it has been built strong enough for these two, it is more than strong enough for the proper cartridges. The 375H&H flanged is about as high pressure as I would put in the Merkel, but that goes for all other brands as well. The 470 NE is a very low pressure round,as are all the old rimmed, or flanged cartridges designed for doubles and are OK as well.
NOW! I don't, for one minute, think the merkel is the strongest double rifle built today, nor do I think it is the weakest. I don't think anyone here will ever ware out a Merkel 470NE, so that is a non issue. IMO, the strongest conventual double rifle made today is a Heym, and Almost any of the modern made double rifles are far stronger than the doubles made at the turn of the 20th century, and that includes the highly recconizable "NAMES"! The fact still remains, the break top double rifle is not suited to pressures higher than 35, to 38,000 psi. unless it is a very small cartridge in a very large double.
One must use his head when dealing with double rifles! They are not only expensive, even for the lowest priced ones, but are little stronger than they were in 1890. At that time the highest pressure of any cartridge was in the neighborhood of 35,000 psi, so anything could be chambered in a good double rifle.
I think the double rifles made today are made very well, and simply because the marketing boys ask for the wrong cartridge in the new doubles, that doesn't mean a buyer with brains will buy them. Also that fact doesn't mean a maker who chambers their rifle in an inappropreate chambering, automatically has a rifle that is stronger than a maker who doesn't!
Likeing, or dislikeing a particular brand, is a personal thing, and the fact that one thinks his brand is better than a brand he doesn't like, certainly does not make it so!
I own several "NAME" double rifles, and I own some with some obscure brands, and in that mix is a Merkel. Haveing said all that, I believe the Merkel to be better made, and stronger than some of the "NAMES" I own. But just like everyone here I may be wrong, but I aint selling NUTHIN!
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..Mac >>>===(x)===>
also DUGABOY1
DUGABOY DESIGNS
Collector/trader of fine double rifles, and African wildlife art
[This message has been edited by MacD37 (edited 05-25-2002).]
Confidence in your own choice being about 90% of the battle, I'd think.
Just to keep things stirred up!
Will