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I remember seeing the wood stock Jered did on his personal rifle at the first K&M match,..... It was awesome. I remember sayin to myself, now that took some time!!
That's a beautiful rifle. I'd almost be scared to shoot it for fear of scratching it! Kind of reminds me of the 375 H&H Mannlicher Jered made for his African safaris. God, that was a beautiful rifle as well.
I can attest to the attention to detail and flat out beautiful wood rifles Jered builds, even-though I don't own one yet, I have been able to personally hold some of the rifles he has build for a customer in south Texas. PS I will own one soon though. Great work brother. JM
Beautiful,work of art, etc. doesn't do it justice. I've always been a sucker for fine wood and bluing.If it shoots 1/2 as good as it looks you really have a winner. How about a contest for the best looking,shooting and possibly most radical and/or strange looking rifle? Paul
No we don't do all of the work in house. I have most of the blanks roughed out before we start. This day and age no one starts with a bastard file and a blank unless they live in Europe and charge more than most make in a year. CNC's have made life hard for the artesian to remain price competitive. Once the blank is roughed I do all the interior work and most of the exterior final fitting. Then it goes out for checkering and finishing. If I checkered it you couldn't sell it for $5 at Walmart. You got to know where your strengths and weaknesses are. When it comes to Mannlichers…….I have a really good grasp on that. The guy I apprenticed under years ago was taught by a German Master smith. Since I had a love affair with them that's one of the very few things I still do the way I was taught. I've never had one fail to shoot 1/2 MOA easily. If I had to put a label on it I would say that the 375's are 5/8 MOA guns but they have moments of brilliance. That being said we cracks clays at 400 with them waaaaay more than we miss. That's a large statement for a caliber that doesn't belong in a Mannlicher.