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9.3x64 Muscle (Verse)

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17 June 2006, 03:47
vapodog
9.3x64 Muscle (Verse)
White spacers and sliding (trigger locking) safeties, plain wood and $50 checkering jobs don't command $2,500 of my money.

I actually was disappointed in this one.




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01 July 2006, 21:32
mr rigby
that rifle is the Belgian FN- 98, since it was plentiful of them and they didnt demand much of working to get them going as fien rifles.
02 July 2006, 11:28
lawndart
quote:
White spacers and sliding (trigger locking) safeties, plain wood and $50 checkering jobs don't command $2,500 of my money.

I actually was disappointed in this one.


What, you don't have a black sharpie pen in the junk drawer in the kitchen?

Cool scope mount.

PS I'm going over to Fat Richard's on Monday Cool.


02 July 2006, 21:12
KY Nimrod
quote:
Originally posted by TrapperP:
quote:
Originally posted by cobra:
quote:
Originally posted by Atkinson:
Yes, I suspect its the equal of our .375 H&H, and that ain't no light praise. thumb


I've always admired the 9.3x64 for a variety of reasons but never owned one. I plan to rectify that in the very near future.


I do believe I'm missing something here. I look at my load tables and the BEST I can find with the 9.3X64 with 286gr bullet is near 2300FPS. With the 375 H&H I can push the 300gr Nosler partition at 2600FPS with a load of Re15. Some 300FPS faster and a heavier bullet sort of forces me to call "Bullshit" on any claim that the 9.3 is equal to the 375 - tain't so, McGee, tain't so! I can't knock the 9.3 as I have no first hand experience but it ain't no 375 H&H. Sort of reminds me of all the claims re the 45LC being "just as powerful as a 44Mag". rotflmo


A little off topic but you need to get out of that swamp some...here's a link to John Linebaugh's article on why the .45 LC not only isn't "just as poweful" but actually outperforms the 44 mag. I can do it in my Bisley too. But I ain't Linebaugh who has tested more revolvers to failure than anyone I know.

.45 Colt myth
03 July 2006, 10:59
ALF
.
04 July 2006, 01:19
.366torque
quote:
Originally posted by vapodog:
White spacers and sliding (trigger locking) safeties, plain wood and $50 checkering jobs don't command $2,500 of my money.

I actually was disappointed in this one.



Looks like a Parker & Hale
08 July 2006, 15:56
Ted Gorsline
Its a Browning FN.
08 July 2006, 23:35
Bwana-be
Not only a great round, but a great case. What, nominally .507" at the base, opposed to the H&H .511"? Hardly a difference, especially when you take that taper out as Brenneke did. Everything that was done with the H&H case could be done with that case, just a hair behind for length and girth (meaning 416 Rem, 308 Baer, etc.) and all the short mags up to the 416 as well.
Seems to have suffered much the same fate as Newton's rounds did: a bit too powerfu lfor the market at the time, rifle weight, bullet technology, etc. Too bad indeed.


Cum catapultae proscriptae erunt tum soli proscript catapultas habebunt.
09 July 2006, 23:52
snowman
The pictured rifle is not a Parker Hale. Parker Hale never put a bolt handle on a rifle like that. The Parker Hale handles are not swept back, they are almost straight and they are dished to provide clearance with the octal end of a scope .Nor is the barrel contour consistant with anything Parker Hale installed.The chamber area of the pictured rifle is very similar to a Voere rifle I have.
Several people have mentioned that 9.3x64 brass is hard to come by. RWS makes some of the finest brass anywhere. I have no problem having it ordered into Canada even after 12 years of Liberal government! Hertenburger makes brass as well. 9.3x64 can be made from 458 or 338 Win cases. I prefer the win brand 458 cases as the resulting 9.3x64 has identical capacity as the RWS cases.
09 July 2007, 11:58
MLG
Just buy a Ruger 375 & be done with it! Big Grin
09 July 2007, 15:24
340Wby
9.3x64 Brenneke would be sweet, also good to have what not many have.
09 July 2007, 18:58
gunmaker
When did the 9.3x64 come out?
The 35 Newton was introduced in 1916. Could Brenneke have based his 9.3x64 on Newton's round using a bore size more common across the pond?


gunmaker
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09 July 2007, 20:18
johnnyreb
If one looks at cartridge case dimensions in Cartridges of the World, the base and rim figures for the 35 Newton and the 350 Rigby Rimless Magnum are AWFUL close. Maybe Newton used a shortened Rigby Rimless Magnum case on a 30-06 length action to make his 35? Pure speculation on my part...
17 July 2007, 01:16
Stu C
quote:
Originally posted by gunmaker:
When did the 9.3x64 come out?
The 35 Newton was introduced in 1916. Could Brenneke have based his 9.3x64 on Newton's round using a bore size more common across the pond?


I've posted this before. History of the Firm of Wilhelm Brenneke 1895 - 1995. It seems to indicate a date of 1927 for introduction of the 9.3x64.






cheers,
- stu