You know, I think I agree. I used to think a drilling was the ultimate, and it may very well be if you can find that perfect, but rare, cartridge/gauge combination. I thought for a while that a Three-Barrel or Hollenbeck drilling in 12 X 12 or 16 X 16, with a good old American cartridge like 32-20, 44-40, 25-35, 22 hi-power would be perfect, but after actually handling one, I found them heavy and bulky, not the light and graceful style of the German guns. I eventually bought a pre-war German drilling(9.32X72 X 16 X 16) and it was a beautiful gun, but I didn't really like the cartridge, even though I reloaded it, nor the short 16 gauge chambers. The Greener side safety also frustrated me, both because I would forget about it and try to slide the tang slide as the safety, but you also have to hold the gun differently for snap shooting, such as with grouse, when using the Greener safety. I flushed two grouse out of a tree recently and instinctively went to the tang safety ( didn't get either grouse).
I eventually traded the drilling for a Simson/Suhl SXS cape gun in 16 ga X 25-35. It's light and petite, carries and handles well, and has a 2 3/4" chamber. The safety is on the tang like a an American double and I love the four flip-up sights. I'm excited to use this gun this Turkey season.
I just handled a 1935-made Kreighoff O/U cape gun in 16ga X 6.5X55mm. BEAUTIFUL GUN. Weighs about 5 1/2lb., Short 22" barrels, beautiful engraving. I would probably trade my Simson for it, but the fellow isn't into a trade right now. If I can scrape up the cash, I would just buy it, which would be a smarter move. Bout the most perfect combo I ever saw.
Mike