Barrel length 60 cm (23,50"), stock length 35,5 cm (14"), overall length 103 cm (40,5"), choke 3/4 (IM), weight 3,4 kg, year of manufacture 1961, Austrian proof, condition 2
Böhler Blitz steel barrels, stepped rib engine-turned, folding rear sight, extractor, converted to o/u combination rifle, the shotshell barrel has a long conversion barrel caliber 22 long rifle, gray stained bascule with side plates, Kersten crossbolts with additional locking barrel hooks, front set trigger pins, engraved with scenes surrounded by arabesques, red deer left, roe deer right, pheasants at the bottom of the case, double trigger with sliding tang safety, walnut stock, Bavarian style cheek piece, fine checkering, stock magazine for 2 large and 3 small cartridges with setting key for the plug-in barrel, ventilated recoil pad, fore-end with Deeley latch, German claw mount with scope Swarovski Habicht 6 Nova, Abs. 8, with spring-loaded eyepiece.
Johann Sigott, who was born in 1872 and worked in Ferlach, did not himself come from a gunsmithing family, even though the name Sigott itself and various variations appear in the historical records of Ferlach. Sigott, first a skilled gunsmith, eventually became a gun manufacturer and a member of the Ferlach cooperative of gunsmiths. In addition to his skills in the trade, Johann Sigott was considered above all a successful hunter. He knew how to skilfully market prominent hunting parties as well as the success stories of his clientele. The Sigott twist rifled bore was a technical feature of his manufacturing. After his death in 1955, the company was continued by his son Arthur Sigott until the 1970s.
Category: Combination Guns