How Perazzi shotgun Created
Daniele Perazzi was six
years old when he was introduced to firearms by his uncle. Later when he was
fourteen, he was hired by a local gunsmith. Before becoming an apprentice to
the gunsmith, he often ran errands around town on a bicycle. Perazzi began
working on his own at the age of twenty.He found his first commercial success
after inventing and patenting a trigger design which he sold to other gun
manufacturers.At the age of twenty five in 1957, Perazzi officially established
Perazzi Armi.[5]
In 1960, Perazzi met Ivo Fabbri, a young
automotive engineer who worked for Fiat. The two joined together to create high
class, yet affordable shotguns. They were inspired by the British gun makers
Boss & Co. and Woodward, who made firearms by hand with extravagant
prices.[3] Perazzi and Ivo believed there was a way to create such high class
firearms that would be affordable for the average Italian. The pair then began
to work with Italian shooting star and gun designer, Ennio Mattarelli.[5] From
this partnership the first Olympic grade Perazzi shotgun was born, which
Mattarelli used to win the gold medal in Olympic trap at the 1964 Tokyo
Olympics with a world record score of 198/200 targets.[6] A year later Fabbri
separated from Perazzi to establish his own firearm company, Fabbri Arms.
Perazzi continued to work with Mattarelli. The two focused on developing a new
shotgun for Mattarelli to shoot at the 1968 Mexico City Olympics. The model MX8
shotgun was born, built specifically for the conditions of shooting in Mexico
City. The gun featured a higher rib and respective higher stock to reduce heat
distortion along the sight plane in the hot climate. Doing so lowered to the
placement of the stock on the shoulder, resulting in the recoil being directed
horizontally back into the shooter, rather than vertical muzzle jump. A pistol
grip was included to increase the control over traditional straight English
stocks.[6] The MX8 was also one of the first guns to have interchangeable screw
in chokes in the bottom barrel.[6] This feature is now found in nearly every
modern shotgun. Also included was the revolutionary detachable v-springs
trigger assembly. Perazzi preferred v-springs over the traditional coil trigger
assembly due to their better trigger pulls.[3] The draw back of v-springs was
their unreliability. When worn out they can break without warning, unlike the
coil trigger assemblies they slowly wear down with age. Since the v-spring
assembly was detachable, they could be changed at any time by the competitor for
peace of mind.[3] This innovation along with slanted hammers reduced misfires
significantly.[6]
Following Daniele Perazzi’s death in 2012, his
son, Mauro, and his daughter, Roberta, have taken over the business.[5]