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Very Hot Topic (More than 25 Replies) Most Popular Single Shot BP Rifle (Read 22956 times)
Sharps1874
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Re: Most Popular Single Shot BP Rifle
Reply #15 - Mar 18th, 2006 at 6:10pm
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I’m Back,

           Yes, it’s been awhile since I have been here. Last October I found a connection in my area of guys that shoot the big guns. And ever since last November, I’ve been shooting my Sharps, and I’ve been loving it. It would be unfair for me to say that the Shiloh Sharps is the best BP rifle out there. What I can say, is that I do understand what someone would want a Sharps, what an incredible rifle…and that is just my personal opinion…it is not a professional opinion from years of shooting other rifles from other manufacturer, just from shooting my rifle. I’ve been bitten, and I have the fever. I’ve got it bad. Shooting with the guys that I have met and going to the Sacramento BPCR Silhouette shoots has been incredible. Last week I learned how to cast bullets from one of the guys that I shoot with that has some 40 years of casting experience. Last week I received what I ordered to start casting myself. I already have from this last Christmas my first bullet mould, the Lyman 535 gr Postell mould. I’m sure all of you experienced what I’m feeling now, and I bet you still get the rush shooting your rifles. 
  
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Dale53
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Re: Most Popular Single Shot BP Rifle
Reply #16 - Mar 19th, 2006 at 12:42am
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Paul;
I have been casting bullets over 55 years. I still get a "rush" when I see a pile of excellent bullets from my bullet moulds. Shooting, casting, and reloading is truly a lifetime sport.

As they say, "Welcome to the club!"

Dale53
  
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Sharps1874
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Re: Most Popular Single Shot BP Rifle
Reply #17 - Mar 19th, 2006 at 1:42am
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Dale53,

     I’m very happy to have joined the  club. I do have years of reloading for my 30-06, 30-30, and my shot gun. Yet the first time I loaded for my 45-70, well how can I describe the feeling, and then to see what I loaded shot well. And now I’m going to casting my own bullets, it’s an incredible feeling. How can anyone that has not experienced this ever understand what it’s like. This sometimes is like when you have buck fever during hunting season. Starting this late casting bullets in my life, doubt if I’ll end up with 55 or more years casting bullets. I’ll happy just to be senile in 55 years. For me, shooting and loading has been a real pleasure, and now I’m adding casting to it. the frosting on the cake has been all the years of hunting with my Dad, and that he has been my mentor in both the hunting and reloading all my life, and now I’m sharing this part with him. 
  
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Tentman
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Re: Most Popular Single Shot BP Rifle
Reply #18 - Mar 19th, 2006 at 4:24am
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Hello Folks

Great Discussion.  Now I know we must respect our hosts in the USA but if we take a wider view then Mr Belgium Martinis choice is faultless (despite the fact I also love 'Walls).

From a technical and user perspective name me one other rifle that you might have in your gun rack like mine that was  first proofed in '73 (thats 1873) and modified in 1899, still in common use today shooting a high velocity smokeless cartridge (that has been in more battles, shot and probably wounded more game than any other) worldwide.

The martini was "the" rifle in service when "the sun never set" on a global empire.

Like a Stevens, Wall or any other it has its faults, but they are mighty easy to live with unless you want to scope it !!

Cheers
  
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marlinguy
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Re: Most Popular Single Shot BP Rifle
Reply #19 - Mar 19th, 2006 at 8:45pm
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Yes the Martini is a great rifle, but definitely not the oldest. There are many that are still in production by one company or more, that started well before the Martini. The Sharps, Ballards, and Rem. Rolling Blocks were all around much longer, and although the Sharps 74 is a "newer" gun, not by much.
The Ballards date to 1861, and the Rolling Blocks to the 1860's also. Both guns are still being made today, and although they don't have the strength of a Martini action, they surely have other benefits that ake them extremely desireable to shooters.
The Rolling Blocks were made in hundreds of thousands, saw much military use all over the world, and still have a huge showing on the firing lines of many BPCR matches. Too many variations, updates, and customs to even begin to count.
I'm not sure there's a singleshot rifle I don't like! They're all great for one reason or another.
  
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Green_Frog
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Re: Most Popular Single Shot BP Rifle
Reply #20 - Mar 19th, 2006 at 9:32pm
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In the words of Kipling,

     "When 'arf of your bullets fly wide in the ditch,
     Don't call your Martini a cross-eyed old bitch;
     She's human as you are -- you treat her as sich,"

So THAT'S where the other 'arf of my $#%^&#@ bullets went.  Somebody slipped me a Martini!   Grin

I repeat my comment from nearly a year ago, 

     "...the single shot rifle that was acknowledged by the market as   
     the most popular of all times (from a commercial point of view) 
     the Winchester Single Shot in high- and low-wall configuration. 
     With over 130,000 of them sold, they are the undeniable champs 
     in popularity.  Only the military rolling blocks and trapdoors are 
     more numerous."

Note the phrases "from a commercial point of view" and "Only the military..."  So I left out the name of the Martini, I still say that as commercial, civilian designs go, the 'walls win levers down.  There is a reason they are called WINchesters.  Besides, they are 'way cool!   8)

OK, now for the disclaimers, the statements above are the opinions of the author (though shared by thinking shooters everywhere) but YMMV because not everyone's tastes are as refined as mine.   Grin

Froggie
  
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leadball
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Re: Most Popular Single Shot BP Rifle
Reply #21 - Mar 20th, 2006 at 9:26am
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FROG;
         I feel no need to respond to your last post--its there for the whole world to see--you've done it to yourself this time--whatever your drinking, bring some to the next match.     leadball
  
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MartiniBelgian
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Re: Most Popular Single Shot BP Rifle
Reply #22 - Mar 20th, 2006 at 9:39am
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I'm afraid someone will have to tell Froggie that there also is an 'outside the US' - and there was not a single manufacturer of Martini's, but lots of them - both military and sporters, volunteers, target and hunting rifles etc.  The number made, even in sporters, would have been quite large - with quite a lot of British, German, Swiss and Belgian manufacturers turning out lots of them, I'm quite sure the actual number produced must have exceeded 130,000, even when only counting the non-military rifles.  They weren't all that popular in the US, that's true - even if Providence Tool did its best.
Tentman is actually completely correct that the Martini system is still in use on "modern" firearms (not talking "replica rifles" here) - like Free pistols.  In its day ( which was the 1980's, and today too...), the BSA int'ls weren't just retro rifles, they were top-class competitive rifles, regardless of action type.  Just like those free pistols now.
OK, I'll get of my rocking horse now  Grin  Of course, I just might be a bit prejudiced.....
  
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MI-shooter
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Re: Most Popular Single Shot BP Rifle
Reply #23 - Mar 20th, 2006 at 12:34pm
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I WAS going to stay out but Froggie made me jump in. 130, 000 is the magic number to be considered a commercial success? Heck, BSA alone made that quanitity and more in just small frame target, training and rook rifles. Toss in Francotte and WW Greener and that alone should top 200,000 commercial models. I'm not sure of the full size military and commercial full size guns, but you only have to look at what is coming out of Nepal alone and the numbers are in the 10,000+ range.
  
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stevens52
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Re: Most Popular Single Shot BP Rifle
Reply #24 - Mar 20th, 2006 at 1:18pm
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You know, I've always wondered why the Martini was illegal for BPCR. True it doesn't have a hammer but it is historically correct and as such should be excluded from that requirement. Technological superiority shouldn't occlude such an historically significant firearm. Perhaps fear of "lock time" gets in the way...........
  
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MartiniBelgian
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Re: Most Popular Single Shot BP Rifle
Reply #25 - Mar 20th, 2006 at 2:18pm
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Correction - it is illegal for silhouette, but not for long range work.  Which is why I will be taking mine to SA shortly, to shoot the WLRHSA match in CPT...
  
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leadball
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Re: Most Popular Single Shot BP Rifle
Reply #26 - Mar 20th, 2006 at 7:15pm
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The Martini was the rifle I was thinking of when responding to Frog's "bellowing" --how does he come up with the magic figure of 130000 as being the yardstick to measure the success of a rifle, wouldn't these stats work just as well=  if Winchester produced 130000 rifles and Stevens produced 12000 44 1/2 rifles does that mean it took Winchester 118000 more rifles to get it right. On page 39 [?] of the Campbell book on Winchester's there is a factory drawing for  a future singleshot rifle that looks for the world like a Stevens 44 1/2--proving that they were on the right track.  signed the Frog's favorite nemesis-----leadball
  
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JDSteele
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Re: Most Popular Single Shot BP Rifle
Reply #27 - Mar 20th, 2006 at 10:26pm
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Quote:

 if Winchester produced 130000 rifles and Stevens produced 12000 44 1/2 rifles does that mean it took Winchester 118000 more rifles to get it right.



No, IMO it actually means that, after 12000 Stevens, the buying public figured out which one was already right!
So there, and VBG! Regards, Joe
  
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DonH
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Re: Most Popular Single Shot BP Rifle
Reply #28 - Mar 21st, 2006 at 8:44am
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    Mr. HST (and others) could probably answer this better than I but it is my understanding that there are two reasons for the Martini's exclusion from BPCRS. First and foremost, it was not of American manufacture. Done, over with! Second, IF it were American made, it has no external hammer. One can argue the metits (or lack of) of this rule but my understanding is that it was put in place to keep things within the spirit of period. (And yes, I know the rules have been bent to allow certain actions but I am referring to the original intent.) 
    I personally don't have a problem with this. True, the Borchardt should/could have been included. However shooters being what they are, give 'em an inch and they'll take a mile. Allow a hammerless, striker-fired action and someone will show up with a Hall benchrest action or a Miller. The other side of this is, of course, that legal actions having faster lock times (the "walls" and the Steven/CPAs for example) do not guarantee winning. Evidence of this is the number of championships won with the Sharps with that big old slow side hammer. When it      
  
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MartiniBelgian
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Re: Most Popular Single Shot BP Rifle
Reply #29 - Mar 21st, 2006 at 10:39am
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Don, far be it for me to argue the silhouette decisions, but the Martini is of american manufacture - just check Providence tool Cy, and the rifles made by them.  Lots of Martini's there... and period manufacture too.  Mind you, it doesn't obey to the external hammer rule, that is true.  I for one don't care, as I don't shoot silhouette, and the aaction is legal for LR.
  
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