Post
by mehulkamdar » Sat Apr 14, 2007 2:46 am
Danish,
I am not very fond of military or military style firearms though I have shot a few but the Boyes/Boys 55 is one that I'll probably own someday. There were more than 60,000 of them made during WW-1 and then they were quickly discarded as they proved ineffective against tank armour even back then. The Germans had a Mauser anti tank gun which also met the same fate and there were others from Steyr-Solothurn and the most powerful was the 20mm Lahti though that wasa two man proposition which required two soldiers to carry it and one of them would shoot it. A friend of mine in Texas whom Mark knows even before I got to know him, has both a nice Boyes and a Lahti.
The rifle's belted 55 cal round was the only one of a number of experimental anti tank rounds made around Europe that was based on an experimental sporting round at the time, the round coming into being during the early horsepower wars during the pre WW-1 era. If I recall right, it was the only belted rimless round adopted into military service in the world. And the belted rimless design was what proved to be it's undoing - it would not feed well in a machine gun and the 50 Browning became an almost ubiquitous round afterwards.
I've discussed this with Grumpy before and I am sure that it is only a question of time before someone goes ahead and designs a modern bolt action rifle to shoot the round in the new horsepower wars these days. The Boyes/Boys rifles are legal to own in every state of the USA except Commiefornia. Depending on their condition they go from $ 6000 to as much as $ 11,000 here and even turn up on auctions like Gunbroker or Auctionarms from time to time.
I know that Wikipedia is not the best source of information on anything but it does have a basic page on the Boyes/Boys rifle that details the approximate numbers made, the reason why it was brought into service and taken out equally fast. I know of one shop in the USA that has made a bolt action in sporter configuration for the 50 BMG and ifsomeone with enough money were to go to them and ask them to make a modern Boyes/Boys sporter, they would, perhaps, be the best people in the world to put one together. The founder of this business, Fred Wells, was considered the maker of the best Mauser type actions in the world through his lifetime and after his death last year, his son Reuben took the business over.