Rules, Terms & Classes A display and judging of fine sporting shotguns and rifles, in appreciation of the design, engineering, craftsmanship and heritage of these works of art. A “fine,” or Concours-worthy, gun should be in good and safe, shootable condition, or bear a notable provenance or be in some way unusual or outstanding. It need not be a vintage gun to be eligible; contemporary pieces also are welcome. Display guns may be owned by individuals, estates, organizations or companies, but they may not be offered for sale. Display guns must be pre-registered with the Concours. Gold Medal Concours judges are well-known authors, appraisers, makers and collectors, selected from the fine-gun community for their knowledge and expertise. Judges may display their own guns, but they will be eligible only for the Boothroyd Award, which is selected by popular ballot. A score sheet, totaling 1,000 points for condition, craftsmanship, action type, grade, “character,” provenance and other qualities, is provided to help the judges in their selection process. NOTE: Judging is by appearance, heritage and/or provenance alone. Judges do not measure barrel wall thickness and are in no way responsible for assessing a gun’s state of proof, its shootability or safety. An award or honor at the Gold Medal Concours d’Elegance of Fine Guns CANNOT be interpreted as a judgment that the gun or rifle is safe to shoot. A Concours award or honor is strictly an indication of a gun’s merit as an artifact of history or craftsmanship. The decisions of the Concours judges or designated award selectors are final. The Concours Selection Committee places guns and rifles in appropriate classes according to bore/caliber and type of action, age, country of origin and other criteria. Each class is described by a code (CBH12 for Classic British Hammer 12-bore; NAS/SR means New American Sidelock Stopping Rifle–see below).Classes may be combined At the judges’ discretion, and by their consensus, and depending upon the number and quality of entries, Gold, Silver and/or Bronze awards may be made to outstanding shotguns and rifles in many categories and according to the following criteria: |
Terms & Definitions | ||
New | Completed after January 1999 | |
Classic | Made between January 1900 and January ’99 | |
Vintage | Made before January 1900 | |
American | USA-made guns | |
British | England, Scotland, Ireland, Wales, the Isle of Man, etc. | |
European | Italy, Germany, Austria, Belgium, Spain, France, etc. | |
NB: Country of majority manufacture, not country of vendor | ||
Stopping Rifle | 5,000 ft-lbs muzzle energy or higher | |
Stalking Rifle | Less than 5,000 ft-lbs muzzle energy | |
Rook Rifle | Rook or .22 caliber; equivalent to Small-Bore Rifle | |
Ball & Shot | Drillings, Vierlings, Cape guns, Paradox and other mixed-use guns may be judged on their own or within broader categories (typically as “Combination” guns) depending on the number of entries, condition and other factors, at the discretion of the judges. |
|
Muzzle-loaders | Muzzle-loading guns or rifles may participate at the invitation of the Selection Committee and will be assigned to appropriate classes. | |
Unusual Actions | Turn-breech designs, for example, or sliding-bolt actions may be judged on their own or within broader categories, depending on number of entries, condition and other factors, at the discretion of the judges. |