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Hello All, I recently purchased these two rifles from an Ohio Auction House. Very high quality, but maker is unknown. There were 7 similar rifles at that auction. Auction house tags were marked "NB" which I assume are the initials of the consignor who owned the rifles. All the rifle's descriptions mentioned gabon ebony, reinforced stocks, Breako recoil reducers, Timney Triggers, and NECG sites and fixtures. These 2 rifles and 2 others were built on P17 platforms, the others were built on commercial Remington actions. Both of these rifles have large forward mounted recoil blocks attached to the bottom of the barrel. The blocks and the rest of the actions are totally glass bedded with a grey bedding material. Again, very professional with not a single bubble in the bedding. Both these rifles remain in NEW condition with sight leaves still un-cut. With these two rifles being of such high quality, I was surprised to not find any indication of the maker, either on the metal or the wood. When removed from the stock, the bottoms of the barrels and the actions were marked with matching serial numbers to insure they mated correctly and not mixed with other rifles being built. This would indicate to me some type of professional builder where several rifles were being built at the same time - rather than one-off work. It a shame that such high quality work would go unidentified, not giving credit to the builder. If you have an opinion as to who built these rifles, please comment. |
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Project rifles perhaps from an up & coming young gunsmith? The stock design on the 470 is far better thought out but You have to admire the work overall it is very good indeed - all very good hunting rifles! |
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Oh yes - those are very nicely done & MOST worthy of being called custom rifles. Very nicely filled. The ebony caps on the cross bolts is nicely done. |
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hard to understand someone make such a good work and don't be proud enough to set at least some small marking somewhere. |
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+1 to Lancaster's observation. Interesting glossy finish and skip line checkering treatment, certainly a retro kind of taste. Possibly intended for or made by a 1970's Texan? Odd to me that they never got to the stage of filing the sights in. - Mike |
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The fit and finish of the stock on the .470 looks better than the .550. The fit of the bottom metal on the .550 is not what I'd expect on a high end custom. Best regards, |
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Quote: Hello 93x64mm Thanks for the reply. Both rifle stocks are nearly identical in fit and finish and features. The 550 Express stock has a drop for increased mag capacity. In addition, the 550 Express also has a "cock-on-open" feature, while the 470 Capstick is left as "cock-on-close". Quote: Hello Daryl_S, Thanks for the reply. Yes, I still have a couple dozen Custom Big Bore rifles in my collection, and these two are right near the top in quality. Quote: Hello 3DogMike, Thanks for the reply. Yes, they are both "Brand New" never used in the field. With there being so many similar rifles in the auction I assume they were all made for collecting and not hunting. Or the owner never got around to using them in the field. As far as date made, the 470 Capstick cartridge didn't appear on the market until Art Alpin introduced it in 1990. (A-Square) And the 550 Express wasn't around until Neal Shirley introduced it in 2007. Based on this, I assume the guns were made in the last 10 - 12 years, 2010-2012 or later. The Auction Tags and the stocks are marked "NB" which I assume was the consignor / Customer for the rifles. I know 7 similar rifles were listed at the Cleveland Ohio auction. The 470 Capstick is stamped "NB-12" so the customer may have had as many as 12 in his collection. If anyone knows a Big Game Rifle Collector from Ohio, or nearby Michigan or Illinois, with the initials "NB" ... please let me know. |
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Hi Buck, Yes, noted that the cartridge design dates to 1990's and 2000's…..I guess I should have said the look of checkering and shiny finish was inspired by 1970's Texas fashion (and Weatherby?). Still interesting rifles, and possibly a challenge chasing down brass and dies? Will be fun shooters. - Mike |
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Quote: Hello 3DogMike, Thanks for the reply. I have brass and bullets and dies for the 470 Capstick. I have brass and dies for the 550 Express, but no bullets. Neal Shirley (the originator of the 550 Express) is sending me some 600g bullets. As soon as they arrive I'll be testing both rifles. |
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Looking forward to the testing. That skip-line checkering is Wtby, seems to me, of the 70's. I think that's where I've seen it before. |
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Quote: Hello Daryl_S, Thanks for the reply. Might be 70's style, but as stated above: ".. the 470 Capstick cartridge didn't appear on the market until Art Alpin introduced it in 1990. (A-Square) And the 550 Express wasn't around until Neal Shirley introduced it in 2007. Based on this, I assume the guns were made in the last 10 - 12 years, 2010-2012 or later...." So I'd be looking for a custom maker in the 2010's+. |