Tony Galazan continues to astonish. While waiting patiently for my RBL 28 to arrive, I also was keeping an eye on Connecticut Shotgun’s pending November 1 new-gun announcement.
I would have bet the farm that it was going to be an RBL 16-gauge. It doesn’t take too much to adapt some 20s to handle 16-gauge barrels. Other gunmakers do it all the time. It wouldn’t require a huge production shift.
But an RBL 12 and a 16 together at the same time? Atta boy, Tony! Way to go. Who woulda thunk it? You can read the specifications for both guns at www.connecticutshotgun.com/byog/gauge.html and www.rblshotgun.com.
The little details haven’t come out yet, but the pricing is a surprise. The RBL 20 Launch Edition started at $2,799. The RBL 28 raised the base price to $3,650. I just assumed that subsequent models would continue the price rise. Shows you what I know. The RBL 12 and 16 both start at a base price of $2,950, a full $700 less than the 28. Of course 28 gauge always was for the carriage trade.
Even with the Euro dropping almost 20% from this April’s high of $1.60, a $3,000 12 or 16 side-by-side of the quality of the RBL will send shock waves through the European market. One can only speculate on what it will be like when, not if, Galazan decides to make a popularly priced O/U.
The more I think about what CSMC is doing, the more impressed I am. CSMC states that the RBL 12, 16 and 20 have sized receivers to fit the different-gauge barrels. Clearly, with the company’s Fox, Model 21 and deluxe Galazan guns, CSMC has the equipment to make all the gauges. But making two different gauges simultaneously by the thousands on the scale that the RBLs will require is something entirely different. It means that Galazan’s capacity and resources clearly have grown. As some domestic shotgun makers struggle, CSMC is soaring.
When I was last at the CSMC plant, at the beginning of the RBL 20 production in 2006, it was just after the firm had moved to the huge three-acre ex-Stanley Tool Works building. To move into a new plant, introduce an entirely new gun line and keep producing the existing four high-end gun lines all at the same time requires prodigious talent. With that in mind, perhaps I shouldn’t have been surprised at the 12 and 16 coming together. There was a lot of unused floor space in the factory when it started. I’m sure that there is less now.
I won’t get the chance to see examples of the new guns in person until the SCI show in January. In the meantime, if any of you visit the factory, please report back and tell us what you see.
From what you read in the web notice, what do you think of the two new offerings?
That’s it for now. Boots off. Beer open.
Posted on Friday, November 14, 2008 in Permalink

Email this page
Print this page
yahoo!
Comments
Shooting Sportsman’s Technoid Talk is a place where SSM readers can share their opinions with Gun Review Editor Bruce Buck. Bruce has been writing for SSM for more than 10 years, starting with book reviews and then gun reviews along with travel articles and product reviews. In addition to writing for SSM he currently has a column in ClayShooting USA. Before that he wrote for Clay Pigeon and Reload! His 35 years of shotgunning have included four trials for the US Olympic International Skeet team, numerous state championships in International Skeet and sporting clays plus a quarter-century of coaching experience, including two summers coaching at the US Olympic Training Center. An avid wingshooter, he has hunted birds in North, Central and South America; Europe and Africa. In this blog he will discuss technical shotgunning issues, shooting techniques and the latest developments in the world of fine shotguns & wingshooting.
Comments will be reviewed for content.
Reader Comments:
I am very happy to see an American gun manufacturer offering guns to compete with the Euopean makers. I have heard some very good things about the RBL guns which is great. I am not however a big fan of boxlocks so an affordable sidelock that competes with the same makers is what I would really like to see. I have two Spanish sidelocks and love them.
Bruce I use to shoot with you international skeet about 30 or so years ago Please call 772-971-9100 Thanks Bill And Tara
I just hope that American shotgunner's appreciate and support the CSMC efforts! I have found that CSMC does everything they can to make the best shotguns here in the USA. I feel much better knowing that the factory is 'onshore' should I ever need support!
I sent my order for a scaled frame 16 gauge on November 1st and promptly received confirmation and a build number.
I have purchased both an RBL-20ga. and an RBL-28. I like the 20ga. and love the 28ga. Both are extremely well made and something that has to be seen and shot to be appreciated.
I order an RBL-16 on Novemeber 1 (PIF) and hope to be one of the first to receive my new gun.
I will have to wait for an RBL-12. Money can be an issue, can't it? I doubt that any stimulus check would cover it. The only thing I would use it for is Sporting Clays and I have plenty of guns that I can do that with. Still, I certainly would like to have one.
339 miles from Rochester, NY to CSMC. Was it worth the trip? Ya sure, you betcha!
My goal was to look at the new 12 ga RBL and see if it was as fine a gun as my Launch Edition. Man, was I excited, this is one sweet gun! There were two 12s, one configured as the "light weight" and the other the heavier configuration. The little guy was 6# 15 oz, big bro was 7# 12 oz.
The light weight has a SST, PG and BTFE. It was one finely balanced gun. It sure didn't feel like almost 7 pounds. It swung very well. It had 28" barrels. Of course, this is a completely built from scratch, hand made gun, so you would expect it to be nice, but it really didn't differ much from the finished RBL's in 20 and 28 in the show room.
The heavier gun has 30" bbls, splinter, DT, straight grip. It was nice too, but it was pretty short. I am sure the finished HW will be great too.
Lou was a great host, showed me the place and gave me the best possible service. Did I buy a gun? Ya sure, you betcha