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05-26-2022, 08:23 PM | #3 | |||||||
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I can't answer your question, Henderson, but would like to address this statement:
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The Following 8 Users Say Thank You to Stan Hillis For Your Post: |
05-26-2022, 08:37 PM | #4 | ||||||
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So far as I understood it, Parkers chambered for 3" shells at the factory are easily distinguished as such vs. essentially larger framed (e.g. 2 and 3-framed guns) 12 ga. guns whose chambers were lengthened after market to accept 3" shells; if you lay as straightedge along the FULL LENGTH of an original factory 3" chambered gun, there is no "swamp" or taper to the barrels, they are straight along the full length of the barrel. Guns bored after market show a decided taper or "dip" to the parallel line from breech to muzzle. And as the case with Fox HE grade guns, most were marked "3 " but not all of them.
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The Following 4 Users Say Thank You to Kevin McCormack For Your Post: |
05-26-2022, 09:32 PM | #5 | |||||||
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Fox with weight in many cases in excess of 9 pounds-led such writers of the 1920s as Askins and Buckingham to label the HE as approaching a 10 gauge frame size. |
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The Following User Says Thank You to henderson Marriott For Your Post: |
05-26-2022, 10:08 PM | #6 | ||||||
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Regardless who made the gun, it has been my experience that the longer the taper of the choke, the pattern remains tighter to a further distance.The Remington Wittemore choke began it's taper at nearly the midpoint of the barrel, with the tightest portion back from the muzzle about 1 1/2-2", and then straight. The belief was that the shot column was more stabilized over the longer constriction, and didn't begin to open until well downrange. I may be over simplifying what I have come to understand, for which I apologize.
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The Following 7 Users Say Thank You to edgarspencer For Your Post: |
05-26-2022, 10:12 PM | #7 | ||||||
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I think many of us would rate the 32” 3 frame 12 ga Parker as being as close to the Super Fox as Parker made
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"If there is a heaven it must have thinning aspen gold, and flighting woodcock, and a bird dog" GBE |
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The Following 3 Users Say Thank You to Rick Losey For Your Post: |
05-27-2022, 07:20 AM | #8 | ||||||
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Parker 1 frame 20/32" with 2 7/8 chambers, choked F/F is my "long range" gun. Oh and I also have an Elsie Crown 20/32", 3" chambers, F/F that probably would qualify as well. My two Fox 20/32" don't have the long chambers but they reach out there pretty far too!
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"A man who carries a cat by the tail learns something he can learn in no other way." |
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The Following 6 Users Say Thank You to Reggie Bishop For Your Post: |
05-27-2022, 08:46 AM | #9 | ||||||
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You often write glowingly and with tidbits of info on Super-Fox guns; perhaps you can provide the references by Askins and Buck to the frames and to that effect? What I've seen are period comments relating to the earliest barrel caliber, i.e., nominally .748/750", which approached 10-gauge bore sizing (actually about 11-gauge). Most Super-Fox frames were made from from 12-gauge frame forgings but machined with somewhat wider width across the breech balls and also at the back end of the frame where it abuts the head of the stock. I wrote "most" because some small number of Supers were "ordered light" and were made up on regular machined frames and running as light as ~ 8-1/4 pounds. For anyone interested and wanting to get into the lore of Supers, it would be well to refer to the index of Super-Fox articles in the DGJ that's on the paying members part of the Fox Collectors forum; plenty of good reading and tech info therein. frank
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The Following 4 Users Say Thank You to Frank Srebro For Your Post: |
05-27-2022, 09:04 AM | #10 | |||||||
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__________________
"Doubtless the good Lord could have made a better game bird than bobwhite, and better country to hunt him in...but equally doubtless, he never did." -- Guy de la Valdene (from A Handful of Feathers ) "'I promise you,' he said, 'on my word of honor, I won't die on the opening of the bird season.'" -- Robert Ruark (from The Old Man and the Boy) |
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