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1890 stepped chamber question
Unread 11-14-2020, 07:17 PM   #1
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Default 1890 stepped chamber question

I have an 1890 made toplever. #1 frame that has a ledge/step in the end of the chamber and measures 2 5/8" deep. So, it doesn't have the smooth chamfer of a regular forcing cone.
I was wondering what thoughts anyone might have about about this? The end of chamber wall thickness is the thickest of any 12 gauge I own .120" and the barrels are also the heaviest at 4 lbs. 1 oz.
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Unread 11-14-2020, 07:54 PM   #2
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Usually something like that would be for brass shells. But that seems a little late for that.
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Unread 11-14-2020, 07:59 PM   #3
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I was wondering about a possibility of that. It could be an improper chamber alteration also. Does anyone happen to know if 2 1/2" or something shorter than 2 5/8" would have been more likely in 1890?
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Unread 11-14-2020, 09:40 PM   #4
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Probably intended for brass shells. Back in the day, brass shells were offered in a plethora of lengths. Both Winchester and Union Metallic Cartridge Co. offered their 12-gauge brass NPEs in 2 1/2 inch length, as well as 2 5/8, 2 3/4, 2 7/8, 3 and 3 1/4 inch lengths. My very heavy 2-frame 1889 vintage Quality GH, with a stamped weight of 58 has 2 3/4 inch chambers with the step at the mouth.
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Unread 11-15-2020, 01:32 AM   #5
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Thanks, Researcher, does your gun and others intended for brass shells accept plastic shells okay? To your knowledge and measurements are the chambers the same ID, comparing those intended for brass and those intended for paper/plastic shells?
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Unread 11-15-2020, 02:01 PM   #6
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I really bought my gun for its 32-inch 20-gauge Vulcan Steel barrels that were fitted in the late teens or first half of the 1920s, after the rib legend changed the CT, U.S.A. but before the Parker Bros. Overload Proved stamp. The original 12-gauge 32-inch barrels were whacked two inches and are straight cylinder. As was Parker Bros. practice in the 1880s and into the early 1890s they are very overbored .757". I have used them shooting Skeet with my Remington STS 7/8 ounce reloads with good results.

In the 1870s and 1880s Union Metallic Cartridge Co. and Winchester didn't offer loaded shotgun shells. They provided brass and paper cases and shooters loaded their own or local smaller operations loaded them. Note these offerings from Chamberlin Cartridge Co. that Load No. 56 and 57 are specifically for Parker Bros. guns --

1886-7 page 6.jpg

1886-7 page 7.jpg

Also in the 1870s up to the middle 1880s brass cases were offered in two types -- A for use in guns chambered for paper shells and B for use in guns chambered to use brass shells only. By the 1887 UMC catalog they no longer mention A or B brass cases.

About 1890/1 both UMC and Winchester began offering factory loaded paper shotgun shells. UMC offered the option of smokeless powder from the beginning, while Winchester provided smokeless powder shells to selected shooters in 1893 and to the general public in 1894.
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