Looking for a proven competition clay gun that’s won almost everything on offer? Your search is over with the Perazzi…
If you want to make money out of gun ownership, then go for a new “London Best” (preferably a Purdey, Holland & Holland or Boss), don’t shoot much — or not at all — and live long.
This idea came to me when I reviewed a second-hand Holland & Holland Royal side-by-side. The gun was immaculate and the bores had worn by less than a thousandth of an inch in diameter since the barrel set was built — the result of slightly over-zealous cleaning rather than shooting, said the gunsmith who, in the era, was my mentor.
The gun had cost around £3,000 when new and, at the time I wrote the review, it was for sale at £16,000.
Unfortunately, not many of us can afford new London Best guns to put my theory to the test. The best we can do is seek out a gun that is going to hold its value reasonably well. And one of those guns is a Perazzi.
It must be exciting to watch the final of an Olympic Trap competition, particularly when the world’s top trap shots are involved. Such was the case in the 1964 Tokyo Olympics, when the aces from the USA, the Soviet Union and Italy were in the frame for gold.
The Italian tricolour was borne by Ennio Mattarelli — a competitor of interest because he was using a gun that, in top trap competition, was very much the new kid on the block: a Perazzi.
It was Mattarelli who triumphed with 198 x 200. He was chosen to represent his country again in the 1968 Mexico Olympics, and went prepared with a Perazzi MX8. He wasn’t on top form and finished in 27th position. The event that year was won by North-country vet Bob Braithwaite, a true British amateur.
Mattarelli — who went on to represent his country in many top competitions, including World Championships — is still with us at just short of 90. He’s the founder of a company making clay traps and a shooting legend — as is the Perazzi MX8, which is still out there winning top-level competitions.
Looking for a proven competition clay gun that’s won almost everything on offer? Your search is over with the Perazzi…
In Italy in 1946 life must have been tough for a young lad with an ambition. In recent years the country, under Mussolini,…
George Digweed was born in Hastings in 1964 He started shooting around the age of 12 He was awarded an…
Perazzis come in forms for every clay-shooting discipline, and for field shooting. They are tough, well-made, elegant guns. So what does a new one cost? Even when we have chosen a model (and up-rated versions have appeared in recent years), the answer can be “how long’s a piece of string?”. There are many standards of finish, and the opportunity to incorporate user-defined options, such as woodwork and engraving. That’s also why there is such a huge variation in second-hand prices.