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Unread 03-09-2021, 07:39 PM   #11
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Quote:
Originally Posted by bob lyons View Post
I was incorrect on the safety it is on or off but it non automatic.......is that standard for skeet gun
Yes it is standard for a skeet gun to have a non-auto safety.
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Unread 03-09-2021, 07:51 PM   #12
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Originally Posted by bob lyons View Post
Dean
It has a single trigger not sure if that was standard or repair
I tried some snap caps in it to make sure the firing pins, ejectors where working and the safety did not go back on.
Would they have sent in back to make the non auto?
The safety seems to have 3 settings is that common?
The Parker Single Selective Trigger was standard on a Skeet gun of that era.





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Unread 03-09-2021, 08:20 PM   #13
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This gun has a pistol grip but some of the skeet guns I just looked at seem to all have straight grips
What was the standard.

Any recommendations on some one to repair the fire end and replace the front bead ?
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Unread 03-09-2021, 08:25 PM   #14
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Absent a PGCA letter, attempting to validate or authenticate special features of an after-purchase Parker are frustrating and speculative. A much better approach would be to state up front how the gun was marketed or advertised (e.g., Parker Skeet Gun), substantiation of special features (checkered butt, non-auto safety, etc.), which would give those asked much more of a basis for proclaiming it "righteous" relative to your questions. Dean, Reggie and Jeff have given you important signposts along the roadmap to deciding what this gun is or is not; a PGCA letter before the fact would have answered most if not all of your questions.
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Unread 03-09-2021, 08:56 PM   #15
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Nice
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Unread 03-09-2021, 09:09 PM   #16
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Kevin I agree. I thought my 20 gauge S/N 241475 was a Skeet gun but not all features add up. The SN book is Showing option 11 which is Ejectors and large Forend. Chokes are .010 RT and .015 Left. Double triggers, capped pistol grip, checkered butt. Lots of Skeet options but no Skeet markings. I have attached some pictures. I remembered that I wrote about this gun when I bought it, so I searched and found the post. Actually after taking it hunting that season I had put it away and forgot about researching it for the most part. I’m not sure if I even ordered the letter. A quick search did not find it in my file. So I guess I have something to research next week. Dang I just don’t remember things like I used to.
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Unread 03-09-2021, 09:53 PM   #17
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Neither does my 28 gauge Skeet gun have the Skeet Out/Skeet In stamps but both my PGCA letter on the gun as well as the G&H Letter on it both clearly identify Parker 236912 as a bona fide “Skeet Gun.” It has all of the standard features we attribute to true Parker Skeet guns, including original chokes of .015” rt. and .008” lt., except it doesn’t have the Skeet choke stamps.






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Unread 03-09-2021, 09:59 PM   #18
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Dean Romig View Post
Too bad somebody thought it would be "smart" to tap those plugs deeper into the buttstock.

Yes, those are for the addition or reduction of weight to balance the gun.

The checkering pattern of the checkered butt is one of the two popular designs in use by Remington on the checkered butt Parkers they were making.





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I doubt that those plugs were tapped in. I've seen that on fairly well documented original guns before.
I can only guess why. Maybe recoil over the years?
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Unread 03-09-2021, 10:21 PM   #19
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I'm sorry Todd - I'll have to disagree with you. Just like the ill-advised folks who bugger only the hinge pin screw head, leaving all other screws on the gun in near perfect condition who do their deed with the mindset of "I wonder what will happen if I...."

I know - I was one of those fools. I decided when I was 12 or 13 to take the screws out of the side of the frame of a borrowed Trojan. Something inside went "klink" and I couldn't get the screw back in and we had to bring it to a qualified gunsmith to rectify the foolhardy damage I had done.






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Unread 03-09-2021, 11:08 PM   #20
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Phil, hard to call it a Skeet Gun without the SKEET IN/SKEET OUT markings on the barrel flats, a PGCA letter or perhaps something from G & H. By the Remington date codes on the barrel flats it was made June (P) 1939 (H) and was in March (A), 1945 (PP) for repair (3).

While the Parker Skeet Gun was usually shown in the Remington era literature with a straight grip, there was the choice of a capped full pistol grip, half pistol grip or straight.

Parker Skeet Gun 1938 catalog.jpg

SKEET GUNS 1939.jpg
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