I recently picked up a Pedersoli AN XIII .69 caliber pistol, and I have to admit-- I absolutely love the pistol in every respect except one: I cannot hit a thing with it.
And I'm not talking about poor groups or shots drifting off center. I mean complete, embarrassing misses at point-blank distances. The first time I took it out, I set up a steel silhouette at roughly fifteen feet and managed to miss the entire target repeatedly. At that range, I should at least be accidentally connecting with steel, but instead I was sending balls into the great unknown like artillery fire.
Since then, I've experimented with just about everything I can think of. I've altered my sight picture endlessly-- orienting the pistol so that more barrel is visible, less barrel is visible, sighting straight down the breech, trying different elevations and points of reference, despite the pistol's complete lack of conventional sights. I've tried patched ball, bare ball with cartridges, varying powder charges, different loading methods, and different holds. Nothing seems to produce any meaningful consistency. Every shot feels like a guess.
Now, I know there are probably a few folks reading this and rolling their eyes, assuming the problem is simply the loose nut behind the barrel. Fair enough-- it's usually wise to rule out the shooter first. But in this case, I'm not exactly new to the game.
That's part of what makes this so baffling. I can generally pick up just about any traditional pistol and shoot it respectably, but this AN XIII has humbled me in spectacular fashion. At this point, I'm genuinely trying to determine whether there's some peculiar trick to these pistols, or whether they're simply regulated in a way that makes them extraordinarily difficult to shoot well.
What makes it especially frustrating is that the pistol itself handles beautifully. The lock is fast, the balance is good, and it's an impressive reproduction overall. But accuracy -or at least practical pointability- has been elusive to say the least.
Pictured below are my '63/'66 Charleville and the AN XIII. I've defarbed both, removing the factory engraving that was present on the left side of both firearms.