So what is a specialty pistol? It's a pistol for shooting outside the realm of conventional pistols, either for hunting or ranges beyond (and sometimes much beyond) normal pistol shooting distances. Specialty pistols also use actions you don't see with conventional pistols, namely break actions or bolt actions. Today I will show you examples of both.
First up is a vintage TC Encore pistol in 7mm-08 when they were being made by the original TC company in Rochester, N.H. Even has an original (made in Japan) TC 2.5-7x pistol scope and came with the original papers. It's getting very hard to find these, now, since TC has recently dropped the Encore, so I wanted to grab one while I still can. Will replace the grips and probably add a different barrel or two, but the gun is all original Rochester made TC and that's what I wanted. And, yes, I have shot 7mm-08 in an Encore pistol before. In fact, I used to shoot much nastier cartridges in an Encore pistol. I am no stranger to these hand canons.

Next up is a bolt action specialty pistol. This is another Anschutz Exemplar in 22 LR. In fact, it's my second one. Both were even made in the same year, 1987 and both are marked made in West Germany, because that's before the wall came down. These are so rare now, I just couldn't pass it up. The previous owner added sling studs, which worked out for me so that I can use a bipod for bench work at 50 and 100 yards. The scope isa 4-12x Bushnell Trophy riflescope. If it shoots like my other Exemplar it will easily do half inch or less at 50 and stay under an inch at 100 yards on a good day with the right ammo.

So now I have two Exemplars. The top Exemplar in the pic is my offhand shooter and it wears either a red dot or small rifle scope for that work, this time a Leupold 3-9 Freedom Rimfire. The bottom Exemplar is the new one and I will use that for bench shooting or field shooting.

So, okay, I am not totally a traditional single action pistol shooter. Now you know.