This is a topic that has come up before. See:
Thread: Rifle barrel on top or bottom
http://www.gboreloaded.com/forums/index.php/topic,166339.0.html I believe that it is ergonomically superior to have the much smaller rifle cartridge mounted over the much larger shotgun shell (and I’m apparently not alone in this thought either). This is something debated/postulated on a great many forums.
And, at the risk of being accused of speaking heresy, I contend that the main reason the combination gun configuration is almost exclusively shotgun over rife has nothing do with pressure criteria, and everything to do with the manufacturers perception of the marketplace demands.
Most would be buyers seem to predominately want affordable combo guns that resemble the classic makes of yesterday.
Gun manufacturers of that bygone era did the best they could with the materials and technologies available to them. And, working within these limitations, rifle under shotguns were (especially in the heavier calibers) the best that could be made.
Yes, there have been a few rifle over shotguns made, but most were sub .25 caliber (is the much denigrated Savage .30-30 the most powerful example ever produced?), and many older ones used lower power black powder/cordite cartridges.
But today, metallurgy is much improved compared to when drillings, cape, combo guns, etc. were developed (or even in their heyday). Using the best materials and technologies available to gunsmiths today, I believe that a safe and reliable heavier .30 caliber rifle over shotgun configuration is easily possible.
Don’t buy this? Well, take a look what is currently available in the market and it seems to corroborate my beliefs. Almost every manufacturer of a combination gun also produces a double (O/U) rifle. All of these manufacturers offer upper & lower barrels in .30/06 (SAMMI 60,000 psi), and .30R Blaser (CIP 59,000 psi) & some also offer 8 x 75RS (CIP 56,275 psi), and .308 (SAMMI 62,000 psi). Many of these double barrels are also interchangeable with a shotgun over rifle combination barrel.
Still not convinced? Read the manufacturers literature. Many state that all of their combination guns and double rifles are built using the same actions (the same two actions: 20 ga or 12 ga depending on rifle cartridge length to be precise). So, if this is true, and all of the actions can safely handle 60,000 psi loads in the top barrel, then there is no engineering/ballistics/pressure/safety reason that a rifle over shotgun configuration can’t be produced.
We’re being held hostage to nostalgia and I for one don’t like it one little bit! That rifle over shotgun combination guns aren’t produced today is due solely to market prejudice, rather than insufficient action strength considerations.
Why would I want a modern gun configured because of yesterday’s limitations? I don’t! Why would I want to have a carburetor equipped car when fuel injection is available? I wouldn’t!
I’m approaching this from the ease of use and engineering aspect: you don’t (if you have any common sense) hide a little bolt (that just might need to be quickly accessed and replaced) below a huge bolt (unless you want users to curse you into eternity [or even worse, get chomped on]).
As I’ve said before, I would be willing to pay a significant premium to have a heavier .30 cal rifle over shotgun combo.
I firmly believe that such a gun is eminently possible to make, but until the few firearms manufacturers active in this area quite producing the products of yesterday for consumers clambering for more of the same, and begin to make much better use of the materials and methods now available to them,
WE will be unlikely to ever have the rifle over shotgun combination's that
SOME of us obviously desire.
A disgruntled combo gun lover.
Best regards,
Steve