I hadn’t seen one of these before so I had to buy it. It was listed as a vet modified piece, but it’s clearly an Akah product. I looked through a late 1930’s catalog of theirs to no avail, perhaps someone has a wartime catalog to check?
Beautiful example of a very tough rifle!! Perhaps a minor detail besides the obvious, but I love the poorly milled extra thick trigger guard bow as well. Congrats Jory!
Nice one Kelly, I never get tired of pressed grips, great looking pistol. I hate bubble wrap directly against a gun, the oils on it or something from manufacturing I suppose do that, minor pet peeve of mine lol.
Neat rifle for sure. Your measurement method is probably hindering accuracy. Plus there are a lot of factors here, if that is cerosafe, there are dimensional changes to factor in as it cools. You could also be looking at muzzle or throat erosion, depending on where you slugged it from...
Now that’s interesting, I’ve not seen one quite like that, repaired bnz45 stocks, yeah, filler in Brünn yeah, toe repairs to prewar guns yep, but not like this. That’s a nice phone call to get!
Great to hear some history on it thanks! I was kind of out collecting around that timeframe, so I missed that, apologies for the rerun. Now you have my curiosity up, any chance there were other rifles found in this house? About a year and a half ago I bought another 1912 Sauer that was found...