The Accurate Reloading Forums
Rigby v Westley Richards
18 June 2018, 17:16
The NorwegianRigby v Westley Richards
Do any of you guys have any experience in using both of these old traditional English double rifles ?
Thoughts ? Comments ? Anyone for sale ?
Morten
The more I know, the less I wonder !
Both made excellent rifles in a variety of grades and each at different times offered actions built on proprietary designs. You might want to narrow your quest to a particular design/caliber.
The price difference among different designs and calibers is substantial.
I sold a lovely Westley two weeks ago built on the Westley patent C-bolt action and commissioned by the Maharajah of Alwahr.
I have spent some time shooting a good friends wonderful .450 3&1/4" Nitro rising bite Rigby. Impossible to beat that type of quality. A true best gun.
Steve
Morten, get one of each :-)
18 June 2018, 21:02
The Norwegianquote:
Originally posted by skb:
Both made excellent rifles in a variety of grades and each at different times offered actions built on proprietary designs. You might want to narrow your quest to a particular design/caliber.
The price difference among different designs and calibers is substantial.
I sold a lovely Westley two weeks ago built on the Westley patent C-bolt action and commissioned by the Maharajah of Alwahr.
I have spent some time shooting a good friends wonderful .450 3&1/4" Nitro rising bite Rigby. Impossible to beat that type of quality. A true best gun.
Steve
Steve/SKB .... Steve Barnett Fine Guns ???
Morten
The more I know, the less I wonder !
18 June 2018, 21:04
The Norwegianquote:
Originally posted by Biebs:
Morten, get one of each :-)
I am working on it Jon... but way too expensive in the US market ...
The more I know, the less I wonder !
18 June 2018, 21:15
Heym SR20Can’t speak for doubles. But have used a 7x57 by Westley Richards and a 275 by Rigby. Styling different, but other than that it’s do you like Westley or Rigby.
bertramandco.com
Steve Bertram
19 June 2018, 00:54
PondoroI recently handeled a prewar rising bite John Rigby in .470...fully engraved, 26" barrels..original case...boy, that was a nice one..

20 June 2018, 08:58
Dutch44I have owned 3 Rigbys, two in 450-400 3 1/4 BPE and one in 450 3 1/4 NE and one Westley .500 NE. All hammer guns. They are all superbly accurate with one Rigby BPE shooting 3/4 inch at 50 yards and 1.3 at 100 yards, the 450 NE was 1.9 inch at 100 yards, the Westley was 1 inch at 50 yards. I don't think there is anything else that I can add.
24 June 2018, 03:31
DuggaBoyequote:
Originally posted by The Norwegian:
Do any of you guys have any experience in using both of these old traditional English double rifles ?
Thoughts ? Comments ? Anyone for sale ?
Morten
Not certain exactly what you want to know-
Overall I have preferred
the feel/handing/styling
of the Westley over the Rigby-
Have owned only 1 of each
and shot a few of each
and handled several of each
As to values,
it will be -
condition/caliber/provenance dependent
between the brands/individual guns
DuggaBoye-O
NRA-Life
Whittington-Life
TSRA-Life
DRSS
DSC
HSC
SCI
24 June 2018, 04:09
enfieldsparesI'd prefer the one that was:
a) The most accurate,
b) In a calibre that I was happy I could satisfy my personal ammunition requirement quantity needs,
c) That was sighted and regulated for the distance I'd mostly use it at.
So select a WR or a Rigby according to how well it fits your needs rather than by the maker's name.
Personally I don't like top extensions...so would not buy anybody's rifle with either a "rising bite" nor a "doll's head".
Also I don't like Westley's lever work as, long term, the corner of top lever can wear. Scott (or similar) lever work is superior.
Buy a gun to use and because it suits YOUR shooting needs not because it is a tick on a list of names.