Gratuitous Gun Pic: Custom Mauser 98 (.375 H&H)

I once heard a very cynical man describe engraving guns as akin to engraving a hammer or an anvil:  “Looks good, doesn’t do nothin’ for it.”

In pure common sense, I agree with him.  However, as someone who appreciates great skill and craftsmanship as much as anyone alive, I deplore such cynicism.

You see, art doesn’t have to be functional;  it just has to excite.

And right on cue, we have this example from Steve Barnett (and right-click to embiggen and enjoy):

Let me start off by looking at the lines of this Safari Custom rifle as a whole:  without a single cut of engraving, that is one exquisite rifle:  lean, curved in all the right places and just plain beautiful.  Now let’s look at the engraving:

 

Good grief, that is so lovely, and so tastefully designed that it makes my heart race.

Now let’s look at the price:  $13,500.

Before anyone gets to having palpitations and fainting fits, allow me to point out that a new Mauser M98 Diplomat in the same caliber runs for:  $15,000.

Functionally, it is identical to the custom rifle;  aesthetically, it’s not even in the same zip code, let alone ballpark.  Lexus, meet Lambo.

And finally, I know that someone’s going to say that they’d be too afraid to take the Safari Mauser out on an African safari, lest they scratch or somehow mar the finish.  Me, I say phooey:

  • dropping the rifle out of an unlatched gun case onto concrete and scratching it up:  a terrible accident
  • scratching the rifle on some ugly African thorn tree while stalking a lion or Cape buff:  a battle scar.

And yes (sigh), I know you can get a Ruger African rifle (in .375 Ruger, though) for a little more than a tenth of the cost of both the above Mausers.

Oscar Wilde once described a cynic as a man who knows the price of everything and the value of nothing.  I think the old pederast nailed it.

5 comments

  1. Kim, if that first rifle had double-set triggers we’d have to lock you in a room for a while, and then give you a cigarette (or three) when you were done.
    I love the Oscar Wilde quote … I’m stealing that for future use.

    1. Actually, I’m not that much of a fan of double set triggers — the single-set ones from CZ have always stood me in good stead in the past.
      Given the quality of gunsmithing in this rifle, I would expect the trigger to be outstanding just as is.

  2. Put the barreled action from the first rifle in that beautiful stock from the second one. Drool…

  3. I know the engraved rifle is very much part of German rifle tradition and all, but this Kraut hates it. A well designed rifle is beautiful, engraving just makes it look busy. (Much like tattoos and the human form.)

    1. I’m with you. While I can and do admire the incredible skill of cutting steel using a loupe and hand made gravers, I think a fully engraved gun is just too busy and the fine work the smiths and machinists did before the engraver is masked by the busyness.
      For me, engraving is something like a tattoo – if you’re going to do it, make it meaningful and discreet, but never full coverage.

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