Cutting edge technology shotguns - opposite of Purdey
Cutting edge technology shotguns - opposite of Purdey
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RustyNissanPrairie

Original Poster:

260 posts

11 months

Friday 30th May
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A random question but......each workday lunchtime a work colleague and I watch random YouTube videos whilst having lunch. We are both engineers.

Recently we've ended up down a rabbit hole of watching shotguns being crafted at Purdey and also Westley Richards. The quality and craftsmanship is absolutely amazing and to be celebrated.

Neither of us shoot and know little about shotgun manufacturers but my question is for anyone who does know - is there a manufacturer who is the exact opposite of Purdey and are using the most modern cutting edge technologies and materials - exotic alloys/composites/laser deposition etc etc to make an F1/aerospace approach shotgun that gave a sporting edge rather than relying on traditional craftsmanship?

I was also wondering if such a gun existed would it have enough kudos to be accepted within the social confines of the shooting world or would you be laughed off the shoot for spending the equivalent of a Purdey on a 'plastic toy'

We found a Browning 525 composite but it wasn't expensive enough to contain enough 'technology' hence the question.

ollie plymsoles

247 posts

115 months

Friday 30th May
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Have a look at the Blaser shotgun factory on Ytube a lad called Johnny Carter did a tour around it not so long ago.

Tango13

9,549 posts

192 months

Friday 30th May
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Beretta use a blend of old school craftsmanship and cutting edge technology

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Lfo1QUGfWZE

As a precision engineer I both appreciate and despise the way Purdey craft their guns. The skill and craftsmanship to create each gun to be totally unique in every way is so impressive but I'm equally appalled that every single part is individually 'fitted' and nothing is interchangeable.

The manufacture of Rolls Royce Merlins Vs Packard Merlins in WW2 being another example.

Evanivitch

24,681 posts

138 months

Friday 30th May
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Always struck me that shotguns used in Olympic grade shooting are very traditional looking, especially compared to the other shooting disciplines.

The_Doc

5,551 posts

236 months

Friday 30th May
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Beyond the balance of the gun, the majority of the influence on result (target hit) is with the podgy pink thing at the stock end.
The return isn't there for exotics.

A good shot will hit more with a 10 yr old £500 gun than a plonker with a £50,000 gun.

Opposite to motorsport. Lewis Hamilton will lose a race to me if he is in a 1.0litre crappy 10 yr old hatchback and I am in a brand new Ferrari with 690hp

Unless any participant literally or figuratively shoots themslef in the foot at the first turn, obvs.


Edited by The_Doc on Friday 30th May 18:54

Evanivitch

24,681 posts

138 months

Friday 30th May
quotequote all
The_Doc said:
Beyond the balance of the gun, the majority of the influence on result (target hit) is with the podgy pink thing at the stock end.
The return isn't there for exotics.

A good shot will hit more with a 10 yr old £500 gun than a plonker with a £50,000 gun.

Opposite to motorsport. Lewis Hamilton will lose a race to me if he is in a 1.0litre crappy 10 yr old hatchback and I am in a brand new Ferrari with 690hp

Unless any participant literally or figuratively shoots themslef in the foot at the first turn, obvs.


Edited by The_Doc on Friday 30th May 18:54
Why isn't that true of other shooting disciplines?

The_Doc

5,551 posts

236 months

Friday 30th May
quotequote all
Dunno.

Swing, lead on target, pull trigger. Lead, not Pb.

You don't actually point at the target when you pull the trigger.
Absolute stability and abcence of movement (Eg with aa gun weighing 0.1g and made of unobtaniim) isn't what you want.

A heavy gun actually kicks less with recoil. A very light gun would have little inertia and might swing unpredictably as the mass accelerates. Although you'd learn it.

The money in shotguns is craftsmanship, scarcity of skills, and badge strength.

Edited by The_Doc on Friday 30th May 19:28

Rough101

2,717 posts

91 months

Friday 30th May
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Tango13 said:
Beretta use a blend of old school craftsmanship and cutting edge.
Yep, that’s what I was going to say.

bobtail4x4

4,031 posts

125 months

Friday 30th May
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they say its the last stroke of the file that makes the difference,
guns can be mass produced, and the final "fitting" done in far less time,

Steve H

6,312 posts

211 months

Saturday 31st May
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The_Doc said:
Beyond the balance of the gun, the majority of the influence on result (target hit) is with the podgy pink thing at the stock end.
The return isn't there for exotics.

A good shot will hit more with a 10 yr old £500 gun than a plonker with a £50,000 gun.

Opposite to motorsport. Lewis Hamilton will lose a race to me if he is in a 1.0litre crappy 10 yr old hatchback and I am in a brand new Ferrari with 690hp

Unless any participant literally or figuratively shoots themslef in the foot at the first turn, obvs.


Edited by The_Doc on Friday 30th May 18:54
There is a race series for Citroen C1s. Fixed formula, standard engines with 68 bhp etc and skinny tyres.

I remember when they added a 24 hour race at Silverstone to the calendar; for months on the run up all the trackdays had loads of these crappy ten year old hatchbacks practicing and being held up by 690hp Ferrari’s hehe.

Everyone thinks they could shoot like Dirty Harry or drive like Lewis Hamilton, until they try wink .

Lefty

18,295 posts

218 months

Saturday 31st May
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This is probably the opposite of a Purdey



https://www.beretta.com/en-us/firearms/by-gun-fami...

WelshRich

481 posts

73 months

Saturday 31st May
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As I understand it, F1 teams still “Blueprint” their engines rather than relying solely on precision manufacturing so are not so different to the likes of Purdey smile

remedy

1,940 posts

207 months

Saturday 31st May
quotequote all
Yeah, something American and pump action is opposite of Purdey.

As above, Blaser are pretty modern. A friend shoots with one. Overly complex trigger though it seems.
A guy at our club has some ridiculous DTL Beretta with a high rib and all sorts of beads along it. Again, very anti Purdey and looks like something out of the Olympics.

Me, I've got a reliable 1998 Beretta 682 Gold cool

jan8p

1,794 posts

244 months

Saturday 31st May
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Take a look at Longthorne guns too. They have made shotguns out of titanium instead of steel using some modern tech.

NDA

23,240 posts

241 months

Saturday 31st May
quotequote all
RustyNissanPrairie said:
I was also wondering if such a gun existed would it have enough kudos to be accepted within the social confines of the shooting world or would you be laughed off the shoot for spending the equivalent of a Purdey on a 'plastic toy'
If you spend let's say £30k a year shooting, you will want a nice looking gun, possibly a handmade gun, to accompany you - rather than something stripped to the bare bones. The shooting result probably wouldn't differ much, but it's often about the pleasure of owning something that's been beautifully made.

It's a bit like Patek Vs Citizen - they both do the same thing essentially.

OldPal

168 posts

156 months

Saturday 31st May
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Kalashnikov mp-155 ultima.

Unsure on the cost but is a pretty cool shotgun. Can take a regular red dot on the top rail but has a thermal sigh built into the stock

Tango13

9,549 posts

192 months

Saturday 31st May
quotequote all
WelshRich said:
As I understand it, F1 teams still Blueprint their engines rather than relying solely on precision manufacturing so are not so different to the likes of Purdey smile
Modern CNC manufacturing is so accurate the engines are blueprinted but instead of a skilled fitter weighing and measuring each part to ensure the correct fit the manufacturing process eliminates any variation in size so each engine will be exactly the same as the next.

See my comment about Rolls Royce Vs Packard above. RR used highly skilled craftsmen to make sure each part of each engine was individually 'fitted' which was an incredibly slow process

It took Packard the best part of a year to re-draw thousands of parts to the correct tolerances and after they got up and running the engine assembly could be completed by seni-skilled workers in less time

Regbuser

5,652 posts

51 months

Saturday 31st May
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The Franchi SPAS 12 was quite, erm, industrial

AndyAudi

3,496 posts

238 months

Saturday 31st May
quotequote all
Evanivitch said:
Why isn't that true of other shooting disciplines?
With other shooting disciplines it’s about real precision, almost anyone will hit somewhere on a 4” target with a small bore rifle, where exactly on that target can be influenced by the slightest thing. (Some even wear stiff clothes to hold them still)

Now throw that 4” target in random directions & speeds & shotgun shooting is a lot more about personal judgement, you’re assessing do you shoot at / above / below / infront (& how far for all of them changes in situation). Almost anyone trying at a clay ground would probably struggle to hit half until they’d learned to judge a bit.

RustyNissanPrairie

Original Poster:

260 posts

11 months

Saturday 31st May
quotequote all
Thanks all, food for thought and more shotgun related lunchtime viewing next week!

Some of the Blaser range is what I was thinking of - DLC coatings and a stripped back industrial look rather than traditional engraving but with the manufacturing prowess behind it.