One thing to understand about doubles is balance. Kreighoffs are not balanced. They are well made, but not balanced correctly. Not unusable, but they feel odd compared to a properly balanced rifle.
What am I talking about? Balance should be at or just in front of the hinge pin. But that is just the balance point. The bulk of the weight should be between the hands. Meaning the stock and barrels should be as light as possible and the action should carry the weight. Kreighoff and Blaser have very small actions and the barrels carry most of the weight. They aren't as fast to point, and don't point as easily as a better balanced rifle (Merkel, Chapuis).
Take a stick 4 feet long and put 10lbs of weight on it. If the weight is near the middle the ends swing easily, and stop easily. If the weight is at the ends, they become hard to swing and hard to stop. This applies to all arms that are intended to be pointed quickly and react quickly.
Just a nuance of doubles. But an important one if you need it in an emergency.
Jeremy
What am I talking about? Balance should be at or just in front of the hinge pin. But that is just the balance point. The bulk of the weight should be between the hands. Meaning the stock and barrels should be as light as possible and the action should carry the weight. Kreighoff and Blaser have very small actions and the barrels carry most of the weight. They aren't as fast to point, and don't point as easily as a better balanced rifle (Merkel, Chapuis).
Take a stick 4 feet long and put 10lbs of weight on it. If the weight is near the middle the ends swing easily, and stop easily. If the weight is at the ends, they become hard to swing and hard to stop. This applies to all arms that are intended to be pointed quickly and react quickly.
Just a nuance of doubles. But an important one if you need it in an emergency.
Jeremy