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The Schultz & Larsen company in Otterup, Denmark was a venture formed by a gunsmithing shop and a very successful target shooter to make precision rifles. In 1919, they are able to purchase a bunch of German arsenal tooling for pennies because of the Treaty of Versailles. They made a number of rifles, both military and sporting, in the 1920s and 1930s. In the aftermath of World War Two, they turned to using surplus German K98k rifles as the basis for hunting and precision sporting rifles. They make a series of different models (1952, 1958, and ultimately 1969) with various improved features.

The model 1969 is the final version, which uses a German bolt and receiver fitted with a heavy new barrel (typically in 6.5x55mm), a new stock with a significant pistol grip (similar to the Swedish CG63), a very nice Danish target trigger, and a set of precision aperture sights. The rifles were a staple of Danish competition shooters for several decades.

Thanks to the Southern Iceland Shooting Association for helping me film this and other cool guns in Iceland!

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Otterup Model 69: From German Sword to Danish Plowshare (ad-free)

https://utreon.com/c/forgottenweapons/ http://www.patreon.com/ForgottenWeapons http://www.floatplane.com/channel/ForgottenWeapons Cool Forgotten Weapons merch! http://shop.forgottenweapons.com The Schultz & Larsen company in Otterup, Denmark was a venture formed by a gunsmithing shop and a very successful target shooter to make precision rifles. In 1919, they are able to purchase a bunch of German arsenal tooling for pennies because of the Treaty of Versailles. They made a number of rifles, both military and sporting, in the 1920s and 1930s. In the aftermath of World War Two, they turned to using surplus German K98k rifles as the basis for hunting and precision sporting rifles. They make a series of different models (1952, 1958, and ultimately 1969) with various improved features. The model 1969 is the final version, which uses a German bolt and receiver fitted with a heavy new barrel (typically in 6.5x55mm), a new stock with a significant pistol grip (similar to the Swedish CG63), a very nice Danish target trigger, and a set of precision aperture sights. The rifles were a staple of Danish competition shooters for several decades. Thanks to the Southern Iceland Shooting Association for helping me film this and other cool guns in Iceland! Contact: Forgotten Weapons 6281 N. Oracle 36270 Tucson, AZ 85740

Comments

Alfred Gawron

It's not a street address, in the old days (more then 20 years ago) the shooting clubs were organized by regions and they had numbers. KREDS or circle in English, designates an area, in this case it's 20th circle (Herfølge Skf, some 50km south of Copenhagen). They are great rifles, funny story is that the actions were actually government property after the war, so the rifles were build and on a government lease in shooting clubs. In the late '80s or early '90s the lease ended and members could buy the rifles privately, usually for peanuts.

Guido Schriewer

those are some very nice sights!

Ed McEneney

What an amazing piece of shooting history. Thanks Ian and Alfred for sharing!

Paul Beck

🤠👍

Clifton Ballad

How many of them made it into the US if any?