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Boxlock
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Boxlock
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Sidelock
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Sidelock
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"...it is always advisable to perceive clearly our ignorance."ť Charles Darwin
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Drilling - A three-barrel shoulder-fired gun, typically with two identical side-by-side shotgun barrels mounted above one rifle barrel. Built primarily in Germany and Austria. If with two rifled barrels above a single rifled barrel, it is called a Bock Drilling. http://www.hallowellco.com/german_combination_gun_names.htm
Good Shooting T.C. The Green Isle
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Sidelock
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Sidelock
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The 118.35 is the "Gauge" of the rifles bore, which means it will accept a plg gage of .340" diameter, but not one of .350". Probability of its being a 9.3x75R caliber is quite high, though not a given. It would need a bore cast to determine for sure. If you take off the bbls there should be more marks on them which are hidden with gun assembled.
Miller/TN I Didn't Say Everything I Said, Yogi Berra
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Boxlock
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Boxlock
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Thanks for the info.. any idea on age, manufacturer, value??
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Sidelock
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Sidelock
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The Kernal; Sorry on that suspected caliber designation, my stubby little ol fingers hit the key above what I intended. That should have read 9.3x72R. I am hesitant to use the terms ever or always, but generally speaking the bore was designated by Millimeters instead of the gauge marks in 1912. This gun likely predates that. The 9.3x72R is a long tapered case having no bottleneck. Bullet dia is about .364". In its black powder loadings it was about the equivlent in power of the American .38-55 but in later Smokeless powder loads it closely approached the .35 Remington.
Your shot bbls are definitely smokeless powder proofed, BUT not for American loads meeting SAAMI specs. With the bbls detached from the action look up & down it & see if there is a nitro mark on the rifle bbl itself. It may be in the form of a crown over N. If not so marked then the rifle portion would only carrt black powder proof.
Miller/TN I Didn't Say Everything I Said, Yogi Berra
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