I Want a Heym

@Daniel Cary ….That rifle is a .470 that I tried to sell you years back; the man in the pic was the original owner who ordered it and never fired it because of neck surgery.

Loved the wood on that rifle, wish I could have kept it; but could not justify owning two .470’s.
I had to re-read this & confirm it's gone...
 
CCH finishes get a bad rap. When brand new, they look stunning. When carried for a year, they look hideous. When carried for a lifetime, they look stunning again. Nothing prettier than muted colors that turn gray with a bit of deep blue remaining.

A bit of trivia for you guys. The "Coin finish" on fine guns is the equivelant of buying new designer blue jeans with torn out knees. After a gun is very, very tired and cannot be restored ever again, the last thing you do to the gun is drop the action into "Tidy Bowl" toilet cleaner. The acid, I think its muriatic but it may be hydrochloric, eats away all color from the crevices of the shallowed engraving, it eats the rust, it eats the remnants of color case hardening. Then the shadtree gunsmith polishes out the action to a "coin finish". It's literally the very first thing you flee from in collector fine guns as it is a ruined, reworked, tarted up old gun with no originality left.

So around 1950 the Spanish, then the Italians started to offer "coin finish" guns and they took off in the market and now people buy them. But they are replicas of worn out guns.

This is different than a Germanic or English gun that when new was CCH, dipped in a light acid to remove the colors, and lightly buffed to a muted gray color. That was original in some cases, but coin finish was never a real thing until a gun was either badly, badly restored or it was a modern replica.

I hate coin finished guns as I stare over my shoulder at two of them on their stands right now.
I've never been a fan a CCH per say, though I've seen some beautiful examples, surreal blues & golds. I did have to read this a few times however interesting. I've never knew what to refer to as a coined, polished, or (as VC often uses, Grey) receiver. Merkel. K, Heym, etc... just wondering if their polished, in short?
Thank you.
elwood epps.jpg

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1703477998513.png
 
I've never been a fan a CCH per say, though I've seen some beautiful examples, surreal blues & golds. I did have to read this a few times however interesting. I've never knew what to refer to as a coined, polished, or (as VC often uses, Grey) receiver. Merkel. K, Heym, etc... just wondering if their polished, in short?
Thank you.
View attachment 576413
View attachment 576414
View attachment 576415


Polished with naval jelly, electroless plated, or stainless steel.

Traditional guns in a French Gray finish were color case hardened for the needed high carbon protection on otherwise low carbon steel, then polished to remove the CCH colors, but leaving the case intact.
 
@Kevin Peacocke ,etc,etc.

I know this has been covered countless times, however, if anyone can help.
heym-fabrik.de has changed course of course.

Heym's 89: is the .500 N.E. always built on the Gross Box?
 
Addl: Disregard the "Jumbo Frame"

Is there different Frames for the 88 as well. Is a 375 built on the same frame as a .500?
Thank You.
 

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Andrew NOLA wrote on SethFitzke's profile.
I just saw Budsgunshop.com has both the guide gun and the African for $1150. FWIW - I bought both and decided to use the Guide gun - I restocked it in a Bell and Carlson stock and I added the Alaska arms floor plate to add a round. I wanted the shorter barrel as I will use a suppressor. I wont go lower than $1100, but I will ship it and no sales tax.

Let me know if you are interested
Andrew NOLA wrote on SethFitzke's profile.
I have an unfired Ruger 375 African if you are interested. $1,100 shipped to you

Bought it earlier this year

Andrew
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