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Grulla 215 shotgun review

Grulla 215 shotgun review

Grulla 215 shotgun.
The gun tested for this month?s issue is an elegant Grulla 12-bore side-by-side from the stock of William Evans in St. James?s Street.

The gun, one of a pair, is a true sidelock with hand-detachable locks, 28in barrels and a straight-hand stock.

It has chokes fixed at quarter and half and hits the scales at a very sensible 6lb 11oz.

Grulla 215 shotgun review.

The price is a comparatively reasonable £13,500 for the pair including VAT. A single gun would cost you in the region of £6,500.

First impressions are good. The Grulla is brush polished but it is not too bright (it is available colour-case hardened, too).

The gun is quite boldly engraved with flora and scroll of unmistakably Continental pattern. I like this because it gives the gun a distinct character, not the usual copy of Purdey or Holland & Holland house styles.

This decoration is attractive and practical. We tend to forget that the function of engraving is not only to embellish but to disguise wear.

Grulla 215 shotgun review.

There are gold-lined cocking indicators, a well-proportioned top lever and a classic top-strap sliding safety with a buttoned, Purdey-style thumb-piece (my favourite for cold or wet days).

The front trigger is articulated and fairly straight (as Spanish first triggers tend to be). The trigger guard has a beaded edge and is well engraved.

The belly of the subtly rounded action bar is carved gracefully to create extra side panels. There are other details which please the eye.

This is an extra-finish gun where no attempt has been made to spoil the ship for a ha?porth of tar.

It is a gun evidently made by hand with pride on the bench and not just by robots and cost accountants (who hate unplanned extras).

The 2.3/4in (70mm) chambered 1200 BAR proof barrels are competently struck up and richly blued.

Internal finish is excellent, with forcing cones longer than the Continental norm (another positive).

The barrels are well put together and straight, built on the chopper-lump system ? where the barrel and lump are forged from a single piece of steel.

There is a traditional concave rib (though a flat rib is an option) with a small, slightly flattened metal bead at the muzzles.

It?s subtle, unobtrusive and well suited to this elegant gun. The actioning inspires confidence, too.

Grulla 215 shotgun review.

Grulla has an excellent reputation and this gun does nothing to alter that. The action, a five-pin sidelock with ?special safety features?, is made from a drop forging and has disc-set strikers.

I did not remove a lock ? I tested the gun on an extremely cold day and did not want to risk damaging the finish as I struggled to remove the lock from its newly finished stock ? but I take this to mean intercepting safety sears as one would expect in a good-quality sidelock.

The stock is of classic English form without any eccentricities of foreign imitation ? comb, hand and splinter fore-end are all well conceived.

Grulla 215 shotgun review.

There is a small silver oval on which initials may be engraved. My only significant criticism (one that might be easily remedied) is that the stock is rather low at heel, where there is more than 2½in of drop.

The butt wood is interestingly figured with the grain straight through the grip (as it should be), the chequering is exceptional, the oil finish good, and wood-to-metal fit excellent as well.

TECHNICAL DATA
Modern Spanish guns can fall down in two areas: their barrel-making and the hardening of their internal components.

The Grulla certainly makes the grade in the first area ? the barrels are first class. It would take a longer acquaintance to confirm the quality of the hardening but the general quality of the gun suggests this will be a very hardy, long-lived, sporting piece.

Members of the Grulla team ? and I had the pleasure of meeting them recently ? make a point of telling you they put extra care into barrel-making and, in particular, regulation.

They note, quite correctly, that many double guns made today are not properly regulated for pattern or point of impact before leaving the factory.

This is obviously to cut costs, but handmade side-by-sides need to be carefully regulated or the chances are they won?t shoot to the same point.

(The barrels of a side-by-side have a tendency to shoot apart, thus, in a 12-bore one usually notes subtle flats at the point of contact at the muzzles between the two tubes to compensate for this. Different bores and barrels require different regulation.)

SHOOTING IMPRESSIONS
It performed well. Spanish guns do not always impress. Some can look very good but not shoot especially well.

They can suffer from subtle problems with stock design, poor regulation and, perhaps most commonly, from excessive vibration.

The Grulla had none of these vices. Indeed, it was an excellent, refined gun to shoot.

Grulla 215 shotgun review.

The weight and balance were good. Even though the stock was low at heel, I had no difficulty in connecting with just about everything thrown at me.

Trigger pulls were crisp and felt recoil was low.

I liked the gun and thought it offered more character and better value than some of the opposition.

Grulla 215 shotgun

£6,500

Importer: William Evans
Tel: 020 7493 0415
Email: [email protected]

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