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Author Topic: Magnum Cape Gun  (Read 1850 times)

Offline wwpete52

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Magnum Cape Gun
« on: April 24, 2009, 03:53:29 PM »
Years ago Dixie Gun Works sold a .69 caliber "Magnum Cape Gun" that was made by Euroarms.  Do any of you guys remember that one?
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Offline mario

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« Reply #1 on: April 24, 2009, 04:09:38 PM »
Yup. Single barrel, half-stock. Soooo nice...

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Offline jbullard1

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« Reply #2 on: April 24, 2009, 04:20:17 PM »
Pedersoli (sp) has a .72 double now

But that ain't a Cape Gun is it
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Offline Christiaan

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« Reply #3 on: April 28, 2009, 03:40:56 AM »
Cape gun has a double meaning.

Firstly it means a gun that was made or sold by one of the Cape gunsmiths in South Africa and documented in the book The Cape Gunsmith by the late Barry M. Berkovitch.  This book is now out of print.

The second, and most accepted, meaning is a Double Muzzleloader or BP cartridge double that usually have one big rifled barrel and one smoothbore shotgun barrel.  Pedersoli makes a superb .58/12ga Cape Gun.

The Cape frontier farmer would then have a gun to shoot either four legged animals or feathered food whenever the opportunity presents itself.

Here are some pics of a beautiful John Hayton (one of the most famous Cape gun dealers) Cape gun.



Very few examples of original Cape Guns survived the frontier abuse.  Good quality Cape Guns fetch very high prices.

I have visited Euroarms factory in Brescia, Italy a few years ago and can assure you they don't make a Cape Gun anymore.
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Offline Christiaan

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« Reply #4 on: April 28, 2009, 03:46:42 AM »
Pedersoli now make their Gibbs rifle in .72 cal, which could qualify as a large caliber single barrel "Cape Gun". Because Cape Guns were English style bigger caliber guns.
Trust God and keep your powder dry.

Offline Christiaan

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« Reply #5 on: April 28, 2009, 03:55:31 AM »
Quote from: "jbullard1"
Pedersoli (sp) has a .72 double now

But that ain't a Cape Gun is it
Jerry, I think it might qualify as a few double rifled barrels were made or sold in the Cape colony.  W. G. Rawbone sold a Double 4 bore  :shock:  elephant gun serial #2569.  It must have been a monster and pretty unpleasant to carry and shoot. If the Pedersoli was .72/.10Ga it would definitely qualify.
Trust God and keep your powder dry.

Offline wwpete52

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« Reply #6 on: April 28, 2009, 04:37:04 AM »
The Euroarms Magnum Cape Gun was a smoothbore with one octagon to round barrel.
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Spotted Bull

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« Reply #7 on: April 28, 2009, 06:06:45 AM »
I'd love to have that double .72!!

That is a sweet looking longarm there too Christiaan

Offline Christiaan

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« Reply #8 on: April 28, 2009, 09:47:16 AM »
It really is sweet, Roaring Bull.  Pity its not mine.

FYI, ..Last year we asked Pedersoli to make the Gibbs in .72 for Africa.  The first ones will be shipped this week.  I can't wait to try one.

We asked for a ghost ring rear sight and that is what they did.
Trust God and keep your powder dry.

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« Reply #9 on: April 28, 2009, 11:32:59 AM »
About 11 or 12 years ago, I visited Dixie Gun Works and took a good look at the Rawbone double that Turner Kirkland had bought in England for the princely sum of $100 several years before that.  The story of that can be read in the first edition of the Lyman Black Powder book.

Anyway, it is a sweet, sweet double rifle.  It is about a .90 caliber and IIRC it weighs about 18 pounds.  It doesn't seem like it has seen a lot of use or abuse.  Turner took this rifle on a hunt with writer Jim Carmichael and in fact did kill an elephant with it.
If that gun is typical of Rawbone, he did mighty fine work.

Being called a 4 bore and having bores of about .90 caliber does bring up an interresting point.  It seems to me that the concept of bore then is more like "more or less" than it is abouot "exact".  Roughly, I think a .90 caliber gun would be more like 6 bore, but yet they are calling it a 4 bore.  I have seen that before with other guns.  4 bore is more like an one inch hole.
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Spotted Bull

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« Reply #10 on: April 28, 2009, 12:46:35 PM »
I thought that "bore" was more of a measurement of how many round lead balls that size weighed 1 pound.  But I could be mistaken.  

I found this chart on the BP Firearms forum that CowboyCS hosts.


Bore         ~              Caliber
A   ~   2.000
B   ~   1.938
C   ~   1.875
D   ~   1.83
E   ~   1.75
F   ~   1.688
1    ~   1.669
H   ~   1.625
J   ~   1.536
K   ~   1.5
L   ~   1.438
M   ~   1.375
2    ~   1.325
O   ~   1.313
P   ~   1.25
3   ~   1.157
4    ~   1.052
5    ~   .955
6    ~   .919
7    ~   .873
8    ~   .835
9    ~   .803
10   ~   .775
11    ~   .751
12    ~   .729
13    ~   .710
14    ~   .693
15    ~   .677
16    ~   .662
17    ~   .649
18    ~   .637
19    ~   .629
20    ~   .615
21    ~   .605
22    ~   .587
24    ~   .579
25    ~   .571
26    ~   .563
27    ~   .556
28    ~   .550
29    ~   .543
30    ~   .537
31    ~   .531
32    ~   .526
33    ~   .520
34    ~   .515
35    ~   .510
36    ~   .506
37    ~   .501
38    ~   .497
39    ~   .492
40    ~   .488
41    ~   .484
42    ~   .480
43    ~   .476
44    ~   .473
45    ~   .469
46    ~   .466
47    ~   .463
48    ~   .459
49    ~   .456
50    ~   .453
51    ~   .450
52    ~   .447
53    ~   .444
54    ~   .442
55    ~   .439
56    ~   .436
57    ~   .434
58    ~   .431
59    ~   .429
60    ~   .426
61    ~   .424
62    ~   .422
63    ~   .419
64    ~   .417
65    ~   .415
66    ~   .413
67    ~   .411
68    ~   .409
69    ~   .407
70    ~   .405
71    ~   .403
72    ~   .401
73    ~   .399
74    ~   .398
75    ~   .396
76    ~   .394
77    ~   .392
78    ~   .391
79    ~   .389
80    ~   .387
81    ~   .386
82    ~   .384
83    ~   .383
84    ~   .381
85    ~   .379
86    ~   .378
87    ~   .377
88    ~   .375
89    ~   .374
90    ~   .372
91    ~   .371
92    ~   .370
93    ~   .368
94    ~   .367
95    ~   .366
96    ~   .364
97    ~   .363
98    ~   .362
99    ~   .361
100   ~    .360
101   ~    .358
102    ~   .357
103    ~   .356
104    ~   .355
105    ~   .354
106    ~   .353
107    ~   .352
108    ~   .350
109    ~   .349
110    ~   .348
111    ~   .347
112    ~   .346
113    ~   .345
114    ~   .344
115    ~   .343
116    ~   .342
117    ~   .341
118    ~   .340
119    ~   .339
120    ~   .338
121    ~   .337
122    ~   .3365
123    ~   .336
124    ~   .335
125    ~   .334
126    ~   .333
127    ~   .332
128    ~   .331
129    ~   .330
130    ~   .3295
131    ~   .329
132    ~   .328
133    ~   .327
134    ~   .3265
135    ~   .326
136    ~   .325
137    ~   .324
138    ~   .323
139    ~   .322
140    ~   .3215
141    ~   .321
142    ~   .320
143    ~   .319
144    ~   .3185
145    ~   .318
146    ~   .317
147    ~   .316
148    ~   .3155
149    ~   .315
150    ~   .314
« Last Edit: April 28, 2009, 02:46:18 PM by Spotted Bull »

Online Bigsmoke

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« Reply #11 on: April 28, 2009, 01:01:31 PM »
Hey, that's a great chart, RB.

Good news for all you Crocket .32 shooters, you're actually shooting a 150 bore gun.  That sounds mighty impressive!!!

IIFC, in the Dixie Gun Works catalog, in the reference section at the back, they also list bore sizes and after they go 3 bore, 2 bore, 1 bore, it goes into an alphabetical mode, like A Bore, B Bore, C Bore, etc. up to over 2 inches.
Live simply. Love generously. Care deeply. Speak kindly. Leave the rest Up to God.

BigSmoke - John Shorb
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Offline jbullard1

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« Reply #12 on: April 28, 2009, 01:57:23 PM »
Oh Man
Just wait until our next shoot and I pull out my 150 bore  :lol  :lol
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Online Bigsmoke

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« Reply #13 on: April 28, 2009, 02:34:51 PM »
Here's the business end of a double 4 bore.  .530 ball shown for perspective.

Live simply. Love generously. Care deeply. Speak kindly. Leave the rest Up to God.

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Spotted Bull

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« Reply #14 on: April 28, 2009, 02:46:52 PM »
Updated the list to include the letters!!