• Friends, our 2nd Amendment rights are always under attack and the NRA has been a constant for decades in helping fight that fight.

    We have partnered with the NRA to offer you a discount on membership and Muzzleloading Forum gets a small percentage too of each membership, so you are supporting both the NRA and us.

    Use this link to sign up please; https://membership.nra.org/recruiters/join/XR045103

I bought this wild bench gun...

Muzzleloading Forum

Help Support Muzzleloading Forum:

This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate links, including eBay, Amazon, and others.
It's about 19 lbs of steel, brass, and wood. Lol Thank you for the word sof encouragement. I need to work the trigger a little as the lock works fine. Thanks again all. And when I'm able to shoot it I will definitely report.
Too heavy for light bench matches, heavy bench only. Personally, I wouldn't put my rest that far forward near the muzzle. I prefer to rest about the middle/balance point. But once you get it dialed in that really doesn't matter. Enjoy shooting it, great rifle.
 
It is definitely a fine target rifle. I know next to nothing about heavy bench rifles but do know that heavy weight aids accuracy. Good luck with your new acquisition.
 
Thus, the rifle's ergonomically designed stock was custom tailored to the Schuetzen rifleman's posture as he assumed a standing shooting position

Yes, this caught my attention right off the bat. Nineteen pounds of off-hand ecstasy. Our NFL machos are pansies compared to those boys. My German ancestors were nowhere near that beefy. Those Krauts must have come from Neander. The beauty of that weight is not feeling any recoil for 3 days. Can someone show me a picture of that posture ? My body sure wasn't made that way.
possible attachment points for a palm rest
I'm thinking cast iron monopod on a poured concrete footing.
Still think it's a really cool rifle, but the speculations here inspire me nearly as much. Maybe more. Wonder what Mr. Malek actually intended it for ? Certainly not a 'canoe' gun. SW
 
Can someone show me a picture of that posture ?
This might help. Much like the modern stance. Perhaps the stance originated with schuetzen rifles?
 

Attachments

  • 88E7AC90-D9F5-4385-A9A0-4BF0A65A3A9F_4_5005_c.jpeg
    88E7AC90-D9F5-4385-A9A0-4BF0A65A3A9F_4_5005_c.jpeg
    51.4 KB
  • 4476850A-BF73-4E74-A6B1-AA1748C6464A_4_5005_c.jpeg
    4476850A-BF73-4E74-A6B1-AA1748C6464A_4_5005_c.jpeg
    80.9 KB
Your rifle is obviously a bench rifle. The large hooked butt plates were pretty common on bench rifles built from the 1940's through the 1980's.

Bench rifle matches used to be pretty common in the US but now most clubs no longer have them. Friendship and other large matches are about the only places you will see them.

FWIW I don't get the whole Light Bench idea...
 
Bench rifle matches used to be pretty common in the US but now most clubs no longer have them. Friendship and other large matches are about the only places you will see them.
Is this an East Coast thing? I'm part of a weekly bench rest match at our local club, and a big club in a nearby city has them every week too. Of course, as far as ML goes I don't think I've ever seen a bench rest match around here. It's all done standing.
 
Back
Top