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10-04-2021, 06:30 PM | #3 | ||||||
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Thanks Stan.
Still wondering if any Parker 16 and 20 gauges were over bored. Anyone? |
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10-04-2021, 07:18 PM | #4 | ||||||
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I've had some early Ithaca NIDs that were over bored -- Super-10 .790", 12-gauge .744", 20-gauge .629" and 28-gauge .570". The NIDs I have that are from after the cocking indicators were dropped circa 1935 are right on industry specs. My sample is certainly not enough to be scientific. My 1910 NIG is actually a bit tight at .724".
Wonder what Uncle Bob Edwards secret was -- Uncle Bob Edwards, Field & Stream, July 1907.jpeg |
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10-04-2021, 07:29 PM | #5 | ||||||
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Austin:
Your question is substantially the same as the one I asked in the "Parker Terms and Nomenclature" thread on 5-29-17: "So, were the barrels of Parker guns of any gauge, including the 16, generally overbored as well as were the 12 and 10 during the brass shell era of production? I ask this because in THE PARKER STORY (authors Gunther, Mullins, Parker, Price and Cote), page 517, the stock books are cited as noting the general discontinuance of over-boring in 12 and 10 gauge guns in the 1890s, but, nothing is said in that paragraph about other gauges." There followed no more posts, thus is an unanswered question, on that thread, anyway.
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10-04-2021, 07:37 PM | #6 | ||||||
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I have several early 1890's Parker 12 gauges with overbored barrels. Some of the 10's may be too but I haven't checked them. Some of these are favorite shooters
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10-04-2021, 08:06 PM | #7 | ||||||
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Without actual factory documentation it can be about impossible to know if a Parker, or any other make of shotgun, was actually overbored by the factory or if it had been honed or “overbored” after the fact.
This topic has been visited several times in the past. This from a previous discussion. .
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10-04-2021, 08:10 PM | #8 | ||||||
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I should have added to my post that it is impossible to know if the bores were overbored by Parker or by someone else later. I think there are enough overbored Parkers from that era that it had to be the factory, but who knows. All I know is the ones I have sure perform well.
The factory records leave a lot of information to be desired.
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10-05-2021, 07:19 AM | #9 | ||||||
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Through very precise measurement of the bore along the entire length of the barrel Richard Hoover could determine if it had been overbored by the Parker factory or by a third party.
Parker would overbore to a particular ID while overboring by someone else wasn’t as precise. I don’t remember the IDs he said indicated factory work but he knew. At the spring southern more than ten years ago he was set up in the Parker/LCS tent and invited folks to bring their 12 and 10 gauge Parkers whose bores were oversize and he would measure them to determine if it was factory work or not. The nominal ID of an 11 gauge is .751 and it is commonly said that Parker would overbore a 12 up to .750 and this is an area we need to be careful not to confuse the two. Of course Parker discontinues making the 11 gauge pretty early in the T/A hammer guns so generally speaking it is pretty easy to determine which is which. I have a chart around here someplace of all the known 11 gauge Parkers so we can determine how late the 11 gauge guns were produced. .
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"I'm a Setter man. Not because I think they're better than the other breeds, but because I'm a romantic - stuck on tradition - and to me, a Setter just "belongs" in the grouse picture." George King, "That's Ruff", 2010 - a timeless classic. |
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10-05-2021, 10:12 AM | #10 | ||||||
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I find that the listing of special cartridges with oversize wads for Parker Bros. guns is a big clue. See Load No. 56 & 57.
1886-7 page 6.jpg 1886-7 page 7.jpg |
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