I've been working on getting a double rifle I picked up in 2023 to shoot properly. It's a German double rifle, presumably from pre-1912, that was retailed by the firm Weisgerber. I've posted pictures it on other folk's threads, but couldn't find a dedicated post by me on it on this forum. Barrels are stamped for gauge at 118/35.
The biggest challenge I've had with this rifle, beyond being an idiot and not listening more attentively when warned that the bore was likely tighter than 9.3mm/0.366", was that factory brass simply wouldn't chamber, even though a chamber cast showed this to be a 9.3x72. What I learned from you all was that prior to the standardization of the 9.3x72 case, there were lots of different variations out there, plus different rim sizes (German and English). Ultimately I was able to resize brass to fit by wrapping the brass with scotch tape roughly 3/4" up from the rim and then lubing as usual with Imperial Case lube and running the case through a full length sizer. Some cases needed a second wrap of tape slightly higher up the case. But now I have more than 50 cases that easily chamber.
Because the bore is actually for 0.358" bullets, loading required a mix of my CH4D 9.3 dies and a set of 357 Mag/Max dies. The 357 dies were needed to size roughly 1/2" of the neck down so it would hold a 180gr 0.358" JHP from Remington. And expand the mouth to start the bullet. Initial results at the range were awful. I've subsequently done a deep clean on the bores using a foam cleaner called Wipe-Out. It removes copper fouling without damage to the steel barrels. Then I switched to magnum primers. Lastly I retried the 180gr JHPs I'd started with, and got some 200gr JSPs made for the 35 Remington.
Based on the results I'm getting on target, I still need to try using a filler to see if that will reduce the high variation in velocity I'm seeing. I also want to slightly increase my powder charge as my rounds are roughly 120fps slower than factory specs and the barrels are shooting a little wide. But the left barrel is shooting really (really) well.
One last observation -- my rifle has single set triggers. The kind where you push them forward to set the trigger for much lighter pull. Whomever had this before me had those set triggers set to super light weights (ounces). On a cold day with cold hands they were too light. I also learned NOT to set the rear trigger before firing the front trigger, as the gun doubled (as any thinking person would expect!) Thankfully this wasn't one of my 450 or 500BPE doubles!
Some pics from the last range session
![[Linked Image from hosting.photobucket.com]](https://hosting.photobucket.com/a208b528-326c-4502-afb2-b69586a9610d/0611b13b-cf84-4483-bb28-5624503487ea.jpg)