He reminds me of my own dad even looks a little like him when he was in his 50's. My wife says slow and for her boring but for those of us in the know these fine tools deserve a slow methodical review.
@@martyadams3915 my ol lady says the same thing ha, I guess you’d just have to be interested in firearms. She could watch folks bake stuff all day and I’d say the same. The video creator is the best. Shows rifles you’d never seen anywhere else on TH-cam. I’ve bought 3 guns I became enamored by on his channel 😂
This rifle is what happens when Wurttembergischer Allgauer makes Bayerische Allgauer angry. Jakele was customizing Blaser R93 rifles and taking too much cut into selling results of newer Blaser R8. Blaser cuts supply of parts to Jakele and down the very same road but on Bayern side Jakele gets angry and comes up with his own rifle. In Herr Jakele's words If Blaser is Mercedes then my rifle is Maybach. It is on my dream list but omnipresent secondhand Sauer 202 and R93 comes at much more affordable prices.
2:32: Another reason to love this channel is Mike's comparison of the Jakele J1 to the Sabatti SKL-20 (known as the "Kipplauf"). Nobody else does this.
You are correct, the design is extraordinary, and quite intriguing from an engineering viewpoint. I still remain uncertain whether I would favor the design over a traditional Mauser style with the full length claw extractor, but I was pleased to see your comprehensive review, (I have followed, and commented upon, your videos for some years. I was the M.D. who commented on your SDH. I have changed my "name" on You Tube.)
Thank you - glad you're here. The Mauser wins in all categories except for two : speed and safety. It'll be hard to make a gun more safe then the Jakele and yet still instantly ready to fire. The Mauser was not designed for ultimate bolt action manual speed - as you know - whereas the Jakele was. This is a remarkable achievement in firearms design. I like your new name. All the best.
A great review Mike. Such a nice looking rifle with traditional walnut stock with modern day fast straight pull bolt with a brilliant design. Thanks for sharing! 🙏
What an interesting rifle. Sleek in appearance and futuristic style. Not sure how it would be accepted in deer camp in northeast Wisconsin. 😊 Great video.
Mike - you keep making me add things to my wish list. That is a fabulous rifle. P.S. there also is Saltech 7.62x51 NATO 150 grain M80 ammunition which is not too hot for an M1A (in addition to the hotter .308).
Hello and thank you! I'll look for the NATO rounds - I used to pull the bullets from the Swiss rounds and replace them with soft points of the same weight - which I can't remember - resulting in my best hunting round.
Wow! Just wow! That is a very impressive rifle. Can i shoot it now lol. Seriously the lines are great the safety concept is great and usually thumbhole stocks interrupt the bueaty of a fine rifle but this one seems to be able to handle it. Good vid!
Machine gun ammunition in 7.62x51 is loaded hotter than standard ball ammunition, partly because the 7.62x51 has a shorter effective range than-in approximate ascending order-the .30-06, .303 Mk VII, 7.62x54R, 303 Mk VIII which was developed as an answer to the German 7.92x57sS load; and of course, the 7.92x57sS 198grain boat-tail load, introduced in late WWI. The sS round superseded the 7.92x57IS round as the German military standard in 1934. N.B. The British Expeditionary Force in the Falklands was significantly disadvantaged by the shorter range of the ill-conceived-from a military standpoint-7.62x51 round. The U.S. experimental .338 machine gun cartridge, is, effectively, an attempt to replicate 7.92x57sS performance. Logic would suggest that adoption of the 7.92x57sS round would make more sense for NATO, given that any MG3 can be converted to use that round.
@ Too much barrel wear with high velocity, even today. Also, after WWI, the Japanese adopted the .303 British round as the 7.7mm Japanese round, Yugoslavia converted from the Serbian 7x57 to the 7.92x57IS, Italy adopted a larger round and Sweden adopted the 8x63 machine gun round-obviously inspired by Brenneke’s prewar military prototype 8x64S round, because: a larger diameter bullet allows more room for tracer compound, thereby increasing burn time and making it easier to direct other weapons onto a target. Longer range, reduced barrel wear and a greater interval before tracer burnout are positive reasons for use of full size military cartridges with approximate 8mm projectile diameter in general purpose machine guns.
No difference between 7,62x51 and 7,92x57. You can easily launch 200 grn bullet from 20-inch barreled 7,62x51 at 750 m/c,yielding similar energy and ballistics with 198 grn sS bullet at 760 m/c from 23,5 inch barrel.Different loads make difference. 338 Norma Magnum is by far superior.
@александрбова-з9г Barrel life and pressure levels are critical factors. A barrel life of several thousand rounds OR possibly less than a thousand rounds is unacceptable for a general purpose machine gun.
Usually I'm not crazy about thumbhole stocks but that one looks more elegant than most to my welding arc flashed eyeballs. Also I think I;d want more than a two round magazine if Mr. Grizzly Bear is charging me.
I am with you Mike; I defiantly prefer the turn bolt to some of the other straight pull actions. Balls and springs in the bolt just does not install confidents in strength or durability.
And in my FN T-bolt, it are just 2 side lugs that prevent the bolt flying backwards in my face. Still perfect after > 40 years😊. The lugs, not my face 😅
Great video as usual! A beautiful rifle and I can tell that you’re impressed with it so that speaks volumes. Looks very intuitive and well made. How did you get one in Canada? Did you have to import through Krico directly? Please try to obtain an Anschutz 1782 and review it. I have one and would value your opinion.
Thank you - Good idea - I'll find an Anschutz 1782. For the rifle - I bought from a friend. There's likely a distributor; although these are quite specialized. Thank you for your kind words.
The Blaser group makes their own barrels in house by hammer forging. I suspect they would not supply barrels to a direct competitor. Whoever is making their barrels, based on the demonstrated accuracy they are very high quality.
@@andymauthe5508 Well, the profile, crown, and scope mounts look exactly like Blaser. The only difference is who the bolt locks into the barrel (as far as I can tell). They probably charge a hefty premium to supply the barrels.
Hello - yes I handled an early model - very well made and sort of a massive variant of the Browning T Bolt. They would sell here; although there seemed to be some concern about trying to enter our market. The range where you shoot your Savage 219 is quite nice - fine rifle as well. All the best.
@@UnitedStatesOfGuns Good to know. Thank you for your kind words about my savage 219 shooting. Not nearly as a refined rifle as I would like, not smooth on the opening, has an auto safety and auto eject, which I am not a fan of. I would love an older made German single shot stalking rifle or a Winchester low wall instead. but first I need to finish my Mauser project. I want to have this blend of military and classic hunting rifle. So I want to put a replica ww2 classic high turret mount and 6x scope on Mauser k98 but then add a Rigby style stock. I think it would make a beautiful blend of both.
Being a bit of a curmudgeon I am not a big fan of European cars or rifles. That being said if I run across one of these in let's say 6.5 Swede or something similar, I will write a check on the spot.
Hello and thanks for asking - Winchester Model 70 pre-64 or a Mauser 98 Sporter - either has it all for hunting purposes - and most other purposes as well IMHO All the best to you in California.
I build custom electric guitars and I tinker around with rifles a bit. I can tell you that the two crafts are almost identical in terms of mechanics and woodcraft. If that rifle were a guitar it would be a world class masterpiece and worth 10-20 factory made units.
That's really interesting - the stringed instruments can be incredible. I used to follow the best luthiers; but I don't know much. You must have many skills - good for you! You're right about the Jakele : fantastic.
Its a very pretty rifle and im a big fan of straight pull rifles but that being said the fact that it doae not cock the rifle when you run the action is an instant turn off for me personally. Also the 2rd mag is a nope the more rounds in grizzly country the better
I would respectfully disagree. I want a one motion action with it ready to go. Not all would need that but those of us who are in Brown Bear country can understand the need for expediency on rare occasions but very critical ones. The muscle memory from handling a variety of bolt actions is transferable while this is a one off. It adds one more muscle motion with another finger to the brew. Beyond that I am a traditionalist and suspicious of new products until they have been proven in the market place for several years. Nice to take a look at though and I thank you for that.
Excellent post. I think a lot of people would agree with you - especially in North America. On the other hand, even here, many people would like the safety of the Jakele. One of the finest rifles for non-dangerous game. Thanks for the note and have a great hunting season!
I was looking at the J1 last year. Nice light weight and short. I did not like the cocking and the old shotgun type hammer. Too long lock time and strane grip feeling compared to a R8
How so? The R8, a nice rifle, but it has a completely different bolt and lockup system. If anything this Rifle is similar to a BRX1 from Beretta. As so the safety, both are striker fired style rifles. One uses a slide switch the other a lever to cock the rifle.
@@EdQ76 No this is very simular to the R8. The R8 does not rotate and just spreads the pedals into the barrel. This rifle rotates larger and fewer pedals into the barrel. They both lock into the barrel , different but simular.They both mount the scope to the barrel. I bet the barrel attaches to the receiver similarly with two bolts. The R8 safety is vastly superior.
I am in the Tennessee mountains watching a Canadian man speak about a German rifle. Life is good. Always enjoy a video from Mike.
And your from California originally
@whiteyfisk9769 noooooo. Absolutely not!
@@whiteyfisk9769death is better then that man 😂
I'm in Ireland watching a Canadian man speaking about a German rifle, commenting on a guy from Tennessee post. Small world. Cool rifle though.
I'm so proud he's my step dad
I'm proud of you as well : )
He reminds me of my own dad even looks a little like him when he was in his 50's. My wife says slow and for her boring but for those of us in the know these fine tools deserve a slow methodical review.
@@martyadams3915 my ol lady says the same thing ha, I guess you’d just have to be interested in firearms. She could watch folks bake stuff all day and I’d say the same. The video creator is the best. Shows rifles you’d never seen anywhere else on TH-cam. I’ve bought 3 guns I became enamored by on his channel 😂
If this is true you are very lucky to have a great man like him in your life.
cool
I cant think of anywhere else that I would have seen this rifle featured and I thank you for sharing it with us.
This rifle is what happens when Wurttembergischer Allgauer makes Bayerische Allgauer angry. Jakele was customizing Blaser R93 rifles and taking too much cut into selling results of newer Blaser R8. Blaser cuts supply of parts to Jakele and down the very same road but on Bayern side Jakele gets angry and comes up with his own rifle. In Herr Jakele's words If Blaser is Mercedes then my rifle is Maybach.
It is on my dream list but omnipresent secondhand Sauer 202 and R93 comes at much more affordable prices.
Excellent post - thank you!
Beautiful. What a fine rifle! Never would have heard of one if it wasn't for this channel. Thanks!
Your camera person shoots good .
Thanks 😎
Wow!!!!! Nice Rifle That's a FIRST for me... thanks for sharing
2:32: Another reason to love this channel is Mike's comparison of the Jakele J1 to the Sabatti SKL-20 (known as the "Kipplauf"). Nobody else does this.
Hey great shots. I’ve been taking a lot more standing shots after watching the your videos.
If you never practice them, you'll never make them.
Unusual rifle. It looks nicely put together. Would never have heard of this without watching your channel. Thanks for sharing! 👍🏻
German technology vs American corporate bean counters
Thank you!
A very beautiful rifle, thank you. The palm swell is especially attractive; the rifle appears to fit you very well.
Wow that is a great rifle. You never cease to amaze me how many unique rifles you come up with. Great shooting also.
Thank you - it's a special rifle - you would shoot it well.
How right you are. Thanks for sharing this one, Mike-it’s unique and very "cool"…(Man)
Thank you Sir! What a beautiful work of art!
That thing looks perfect.
You are correct, the design is extraordinary, and quite intriguing from an engineering viewpoint. I still remain uncertain whether I would favor the design over a traditional Mauser style with the full length claw extractor, but I was pleased to see your comprehensive review,
(I have followed, and commented upon, your videos for some years. I was the M.D. who commented on your SDH. I have changed my "name" on You Tube.)
Thank you - glad you're here. The Mauser wins in all categories except for two : speed and safety. It'll be hard to make a gun more safe then the Jakele and yet still instantly ready to fire. The Mauser was not designed for ultimate bolt action manual speed - as you know - whereas the Jakele was. This is a remarkable achievement in firearms design. I like your new name. All the best.
What a different configuration for a firearm. WoW. Never in my life have I seen one of those. Nice furniture. Take Care and Stay Safe.
Oh my, that's a nice looking rifle Mike, so good to see you both up there shooting.
Cheers all!
That is a really cool rifle! I've never heard of them before. But it is definitely unique.
A great review Mike. Such a nice looking rifle with traditional walnut stock with modern day fast straight pull bolt with a brilliant design. Thanks for sharing! 🙏
Outstanding video and collection of rifles.
I would like to see a steel action hs review from you. 😊
Great video Mike. It’s so rare to see something really different in the market like this. Very interesting rifle and great presentation.
What an interesting rifle. Sleek in appearance and futuristic style. Not sure how it would be accepted in deer camp in northeast Wisconsin. 😊 Great video.
What a beautiful rifle.
Mike - you keep making me add things to my wish list. That is a fabulous rifle.
P.S. there also is Saltech 7.62x51 NATO 150 grain M80 ammunition which is not too hot for an M1A (in addition to the hotter .308).
Hello and thank you! I'll look for the NATO rounds - I used to pull the bullets from the Swiss rounds and replace them with soft points of the same weight - which I can't remember - resulting in my best hunting round.
Thanks 😎
beautyfull rifle I have looked at these before as I like straight pull rifles. super nice.
Mike, love your videos always unique.
Thank you Gregory 🙏
That is a beautiful rifle.
Increadable firearm.
Thanks 😎
Beautiful rifle and great video as always. Would probably need to sell part of my anatomy for a Jakele 😂😂 but well worth it. Cheers.
Hi Mike nice to see you again I look forward to your videos. Such a beautiful gun . thank you mike
What a beautiful rifle!!!!!!❤❤❤❤❤❤
Very nice and very unique.
Jakele...the rifle with the middle finger 🤦♂🤦♂😂😂🤪🤪
Wow! Just wow! That is a very impressive rifle. Can i shoot it now lol. Seriously the lines are great the safety concept is great and usually thumbhole stocks interrupt the bueaty of a fine rifle but this one seems to be able to handle it. Good vid!
Excellent action for a bench rifle.
Excellent thought!
Very Nice. Thank You USOG!
Christ bless!
Beautiful grain pattern in that stock.
🇨🇦
Machine gun ammunition in 7.62x51 is loaded hotter than standard ball ammunition, partly because the 7.62x51 has a shorter effective range than-in approximate ascending order-the .30-06, .303 Mk VII, 7.62x54R, 303 Mk VIII which was developed as an answer to the German 7.92x57sS load; and of course, the 7.92x57sS 198grain boat-tail load, introduced in late WWI. The sS round superseded the 7.92x57IS round as the German military standard in 1934.
N.B. The British Expeditionary Force in the Falklands was significantly disadvantaged by the shorter range of the ill-conceived-from a military standpoint-7.62x51 round. The U.S. experimental .338 machine gun cartridge, is, effectively, an attempt to replicate 7.92x57sS performance. Logic would suggest that adoption of the 7.92x57sS round would make more sense for NATO, given that any MG3 can be converted to use that round.
Too bad the Brits couldn't have had more time with the 276 Enfield. 72 gr. Case capacity with a heavy 7mm projectile looks very interesting.
@ Too much barrel wear with high velocity, even today. Also, after WWI, the Japanese adopted the .303 British round as the 7.7mm Japanese round, Yugoslavia converted from the Serbian 7x57 to the 7.92x57IS, Italy adopted a larger round and Sweden adopted the 8x63 machine gun round-obviously inspired by Brenneke’s prewar military prototype 8x64S round, because:
a larger diameter bullet allows more room for tracer compound, thereby increasing burn time and making it easier to direct other weapons onto a target.
Longer range, reduced barrel wear and a greater interval before tracer burnout are positive reasons for use of full size military cartridges with approximate 8mm projectile diameter in general purpose machine guns.
No difference between 7,62x51 and 7,92x57. You can easily launch 200 grn bullet from 20-inch barreled 7,62x51 at 750 m/c,yielding similar energy and ballistics with 198 grn sS bullet at 760 m/c from 23,5 inch barrel.Different loads make difference.
338 Norma Magnum is by far superior.
@александрбова-з9г Barrel life and pressure levels are critical factors. A barrel life of several thousand rounds OR possibly less than a thousand rounds is unacceptable for a general purpose machine gun.
Usually I'm not crazy about thumbhole stocks but that one looks more elegant than most to my welding arc flashed eyeballs. Also I think I;d want more than a two round magazine if Mr. Grizzly Bear is charging me.
I am with you Mike; I defiantly prefer the turn bolt to some of the other straight pull actions. Balls and springs in the bolt just does not install confidents in strength or durability.
"Balls and springs" are used in hydraulic fittings, and do seem to work rather well in other rifles, too ..
And in my FN T-bolt, it are just 2 side lugs that prevent the bolt flying backwards in my face. Still perfect after > 40 years😊. The lugs, not my face 😅
Great video as usual! A beautiful rifle and I can tell that you’re impressed with it so that speaks volumes. Looks very intuitive and well made. How did you get one in Canada? Did you have to import through Krico directly? Please try to obtain an Anschutz 1782 and review it. I have one and would value your opinion.
Thank you - Good idea - I'll find an Anschutz 1782. For the rifle - I bought from a friend. There's likely a distributor; although these are quite specialized. Thank you for your kind words.
Wholesome.
Nice rifle. I also prefer a breech-bolt in a straight-pull rifle.
My Blaser R8 also groups like that in 30’06. I suspect the barrel is made by the same who make Blaser barrels. The rotating lugs are nice.
The Blaser group makes their own barrels in house by hammer forging. I suspect they would not supply barrels to a direct competitor. Whoever is making their barrels, based on the demonstrated accuracy they are very high quality.
@@andymauthe5508 Well, the profile, crown, and scope mounts look exactly like Blaser. The only difference is who the bolt locks into the barrel (as far as I can tell). They probably charge a hefty premium to supply the barrels.
To each his own I guess but not a fan of that stock but still enjoyed the video Mike
Hey Mike have you ever seen the LYNX straight pull from Finland?
Hello - yes I handled an early model - very well made and sort of a massive variant of the Browning T Bolt. They would sell here; although there seemed to be some concern about trying to enter our market. The range where you shoot your Savage 219 is quite nice - fine rifle as well. All the best.
@@UnitedStatesOfGuns Good to know. Thank you for your kind words about my savage 219 shooting. Not nearly as a refined rifle as I would like, not smooth on the opening, has an auto safety and auto eject, which I am not a fan of. I would love an older made German single shot stalking rifle or a Winchester low wall instead. but first I need to finish my Mauser project. I want to have this blend of military and classic hunting rifle. So I want to put a replica ww2 classic high turret mount and 6x scope on Mauser k98 but then add a Rigby style stock. I think it would make a beautiful blend of both.
I used to be fascinated by straight pull rifles, but I found that in practice I was not any faster than with a conventional turn bolt rifle.
Knifes what we are good at!!!!!
Being a bit of a curmudgeon I am not a big fan of European cars or rifles. That being said if I run across one of these in let's say 6.5 Swede or something similar, I will write a check on the spot.
It's got so many safety features that it almost seems designed not to shoot it.
Hi Mike - if you could own one (1) hunting rifle chambered in 30-06 what would the make/model be?
Much appreciation and gratitude from California.
🙏
Hello and thanks for asking - Winchester Model 70 pre-64 or a Mauser 98 Sporter - either has it all for hunting purposes - and most other purposes as well IMHO
All the best to you in California.
I build custom electric guitars and I tinker around with rifles a bit. I can tell you that the two crafts are almost identical in terms of mechanics and woodcraft. If that rifle were a guitar it would be a world class masterpiece and worth 10-20 factory made units.
That's really interesting - the stringed instruments can be incredible. I used to follow the best luthiers; but I don't know much. You must have many skills - good for you! You're right about the Jakele : fantastic.
Have you ever seen or heard of P.O.Ackley custom rifles that are not Ackley improved
They thought of everything, except to properly finish the stock and forearm. Haa, but that's my preference for stocks. Thanks
Its a very pretty rifle and im a big fan of straight pull rifles but that being said the fact that it doae not cock the rifle when you run the action is an instant turn off for me personally. Also the 2rd mag is a nope the more rounds in grizzly country the better
I would respectfully disagree. I want a one motion action with it ready to go. Not all would need that but those of us who are in Brown Bear country can understand the need for expediency on rare occasions but very critical ones. The muscle memory from handling a variety of bolt actions is transferable while this is a one off. It adds one more muscle motion with another finger to the brew. Beyond that I am a traditionalist and suspicious of new products until they have been proven in the market place for several years. Nice to take a look at though and I thank you for that.
Excellent post. I think a lot of people would agree with you - especially in North America. On the other hand, even here, many people would like the safety of the Jakele. One of the finest rifles for non-dangerous game. Thanks for the note and have a great hunting season!
Hi; the name of the rifle is the same as the name of one of my Finnish colleagues...where is it actually made?
Bayern part of Allgau district in Germany. Jakele Waffen.
I realize the front of the bolt turns and locks in...but isnt that a straight pull, like a canadian Ross ?
It is a straight pull rifle and manner of lock reminds me of Swiss K 11 / 31
6,000€ - GLOP. Well yeah, it is such a rifle you buy and use for hunting the next 40 years or so. Without having to wonder how to improve.
I was looking at the J1 last year. Nice light weight and short. I did not like the cocking and the old shotgun type hammer. Too long lock time and strane grip feeling compared to a R8
Good post - thank you.
That is a stunning rifle. It looks like it requires a mortgage to own….😢
Thank you - you're right - amazing... but they are expensive.
Too expensive, but very cool
You're right.
Ya, we Germans like fancy design. lol "I'm American"
A good looking woman & a good looking gun . two love's .
PizzA
Do Merkel Helix speedster ❤
Which is nicer to use and why?
A look alike copy of Blaser R8.
Makes me feel pathetic
What?
Only one thing wrong
It's right handed
: )
What said I can build it but not buy it lats make knifes
This company makes a pump action rifle that is probably the coolest rifle ever made in a pump. This single shot thing is not great.
Single shot?? It has a magazine.
3 round capacity 2+ 1 = Deer.
You were confused by the lever, which is in fact a safety release. It is a 2+1 rifle. Just watch until the shooting at the end😊
Blaser R8 clone, the Blazer safety is far superior…….
😅 This rifle is direct product of feud between Blaser and Jakele.
How so? The R8, a nice rifle, but it has a completely different bolt and lockup system.
If anything this Rifle is similar to a BRX1 from Beretta.
As so the safety, both are striker fired style rifles. One uses a slide switch the other a lever to cock the rifle.
@@EdQ76 No this is very simular to the R8. The R8 does not rotate and just spreads the pedals into the barrel. This rifle rotates larger and fewer pedals into the barrel. They both lock into the barrel , different but simular.They both mount the scope to the barrel. I bet the barrel attaches to the receiver similarly with two bolts.
The R8 safety is vastly superior.
Blaser are envious for the safety measure, they haven't thought of
Jakele is an Austrian company, actually. Not German.