I also have one of these - Silver Fox marked Made In Tokyo Pre WW2 - Can you tell me what they're worth. I've had this one checked & still works fine. You're the first contact I've gotten searching for this rifle. LMK Thanks
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I also have one of these - Silver Fox marked Made In Tokyo Pre WW2 - Can you tell me what they're worth. I've had this one checked & still works fine. You're the first contact I've gotten searching for this rifle. LMK Thanks
I had one of those and foolishly sold it when I took a ten year dive into PCPs. Mine was a 1932 model. I sorely miss that rifle. Unparalleled quality and functionality. Thanks for the memories.
Definitely an underlever, not a break-barrel...but we won't complain, LOL! It's a beauty!BSA. Bought it locally from a guy. It belong to his relative. I belive it's early 1900's.
This may not qualify as a break barrel.
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First one I've seen with a double set trigger. Nice! The lock-up mechanism on the Original V is so smooth.If my Britannia doesn't quality, then it would have to be this deluxe FLZ Original V. It has a blued steel grip cap & buttplate, sling swivels, and a double-set trigger that is as light and predictable as a FWB300. It also has an interesting stamp of a deer head and crossed rifles surrounded by vines with acorns. I bought it a couple of decades ago from a WWII vet who claimed to have rescued it from a huge soon-to-be-destroyed pile of firearms in Allied-occupied Germany.
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Very nice - must be one of the best examples around. The tinplate barrel looks like a Diana 22.I don't know how old this Falke 40 is because Falke never placed serial numbers on his guns, but it must be from about 1947-58 when the company was active. All Falke are copies of other manufacturers products, this Falke 40 a copy of a "tinplate" Diana 22. It's a "boys" rifle, a very cheap almost toylike airgun that will send a pellet down the brass barrel insert.
Falke was more a machine shop than airgun designer, made whatever would sell in post war Germany? The owner had been employed by Arado, the aircraft manufacturer, and suspect he was given permission by the British to make Diana and BSA Airsporter copies? View attachment 470936