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08-30-2010, 09:59 PM | #3 | ||||||
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Bill is bang on. Prior to laying out your cash, go to the home page and cruise through all the tabs on the left side of the page. A wealth of info and a lot of great photos. Read the FAQ's. A lot of effort has gone in to building the information so that an individual can enlighten themselves at their leisure. The "round bolt" you speak of can be seen in the Technical info tab and the part name is given. If you get tempted to attack the screw slot on the "round bolt" DON'T DO IT. It may look like it has some role in undoing something but it should be left alone. About all that happens when playing with that part is the screw slot gets damaged. If it truly needs to be undone, the gun has a problem beyond the average Joe playing with it. You will find, after your research, that the Trojan is not a high grade gun but it is a great field gun that has taken a lot of game.
Enjoy your reading. Cheers, Jack
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Hunt ethically. Eat heartily. |
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The Following User Says Thank You to Jack Cronkhite For Your Post: |
Numerical progression Milt- |
08-30-2010, 11:02 PM | #4 | ||||||
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Numerical progression Milt-
I understand, I think, your possible confusion. Parker grade numbers for the Hammerless double guns, I believe initially ran from 1 through 8, the higher the number, the higher the Grade- I have two older PH guns with Twist barrels, they are both marked with 1 on the watertable, as well as the letter P- my GHE is a grade 2, so marked on the watertable- DH- grade 3, CH grade 4, BH grade 5, AH grade 6, AAH grade 7, and the scarce A-1 Special grade 8.
When Parker Bros. later brought out the VH grade, as there is no number smaller than 1, already in usage, that grade with be marked V- the Trojan was the last "new" grade Parker introduced- possibly to compete with the fine AH Fox Sterlingworth- as an economy model- no "extras available" but a solid field grade gun indeed. I have owned and hunted with two 12 gauge Trojans, both were marked OV on the watertable. The Trojan grade can always be distinguished as the frame contours are not sculpted as on the higher (VH-A1-S grades) and no ejectors were offered for the Trojan. You can also "ballpark" the grade of the Parker you have in hand by the barrel steel: Vulcan, Special, Titanic, Acme, Peerless etc- BUT this is not 100% accurate, as over the years a DH(E) may turn up with Acme barrels, or a CH(E) with Titanic barrels, etc. Case in point- my GHE 12 has 28" Vulcan Steel barrels, usually found on the VH(E) grade. The other gents are right- research and the TPS book(s) are the best place to start your quest for an "Olde Reliable". If you should end up with a Trojan, whether 12, 16 or 20 bore-you will have, along with the VH(E), the most popular model Parker offered- and as a collector friend advised me when I bought my first Parker (a Trojan 12 many years ago)- in a era of "upgraded and possible counfeited" Parkers (due to the great demand for them) no one can ever "upgrade" and pass off a Trojan as being a BH(E), due to the difference in the frame contours. Any Parker Trojan or VH that fits you and has not been badly "butchered" (cut off buttstock, cut off barrels etc.) will perform just as well in your hands as a AAH(E) grade would- Good luck in your quest. |
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08-31-2010, 12:15 AM | #5 | ||||||
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how many trojans were made in 8 gauge and 10 gauge ? . is the grade numbers the same as the frame size numbers ?.how many hammerless were 8 gauge ?
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08-31-2010, 06:56 AM | #6 | ||||||
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Milton, There are no Trojan 8 and 10 gauge gun's. 12,16 and 20 were the only gauges available in the Trojan.
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"Much care is bestowed to make it what the Sportsman needs-a good gun"-Charles Parker |
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The Following 2 Users Say Thank You to Dave Suponski For Your Post: |
Thanks to Bro Dave- |
08-31-2010, 09:15 AM | #7 | ||||||
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Thanks to Bro Dave-
David is correct Milt- the Trojan was only offered in 12-16-20 gauges, never with ejectors, most often with double triggers, and without the 1878 patent date forearm latch mechanism found on the Graded Parker hammerless guns.
But as they say, never say never too often- Peter Johnson in his 1960 book on Parkers mentions a very few Trojans made in 24 gauge- on the PGCA site I also read about a few Trojans offered with Twist barrels instead of the Trojan Steel- I agree, grade numbers on the watertable, but the frame size for your Parker is found on the bottom rear part of the lug-if a later series gun, right behind the pinned in place tool steel wedge shaped wear bar- Almost always in the Trojan- 12 gauges were No. 2 frame, 16 gauges were No. 1 frame, 20 gauges No. O frame size. The difference in the size of the frame in the same gauge Parker is mainly the dims. on center between the firing pin holes in the standing breech face- If you had two 12 gauge VH(E) Parkers, one on a size 2 frame, the other on a size 1 frame, you would see the difference in that set of dimensions right away- also the wall thickness at breech of the size 2 framed gun would be somewhat greater than that found on the size 1 framed gun-- I have a shooting companion that inherited a "matched pair" (sort of); two 12 VHE Parkers- both on the No. 1 frame-one made in 1913 with 28" Vulcan steel barrels and straight hand stock and DHBP, one made in 1924 with 30" Vulcan barrels, pistol grip and a red recoil pad- both balance perfectly at the hinge point and weigh aprox 7 lbs. He is wise enough to use RST 1 oz. light loads in either one- |
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08-31-2010, 06:26 PM | #8 | ||||||
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doesnt T grade stand for trojan ?
http://www.pugsguns.com/findItem.action?id=1438 can someone correct me if wrong there so many grades kind of confusing being new at this lol |
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08-31-2010, 07:13 PM | #9 | ||||||
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No T doesn't stand for Trojan.
It is a mistake to make assumptions when discussing Parkers, or anything else for that matter, for which there are reams and volumes of documented research data available. |
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08-31-2010, 07:33 PM | #10 | ||||||
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Milton, T is listed as Twist steel barrels unknown grade in The Parker Story. My guess is it's a grade O or 1.
Parker used allot of the alphabet for awhile, One letter for a 10 ga pistol grip another for a straight grip. |
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The Following User Says Thank You to E Robert Fabian For Your Post: |
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