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#33 | ||||||
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Bert is doing a Trojan for me and has sent my barrels to Black Diamond (along with the barrels from a donor Trojan) for a rib swap.
I have carried this gun behind three dogs for thirty years and have taken many birds. I would often “rap” their heads on the rib if they were still fluttering when retrieved to me, eventually pitting the rib. I deemed it an elegant solution, as I want this to be “lock, stock and barrels”, the very same gun that I carried behind those dogs. Only now, it will be sporting their images and our quarry on the (previously) unadorned action in tribute to them, as well as gold filling the Parker name (& perhaps adding “Trojan”) in tribute to the gun. Bert does excellent work. He knows and appreciates the gun as is. And for an engraver…,well it’s a blank canvas. And I’m excited to turn him loose on this project as I trust him and the vendors he chooses to help realize my vision. Seems a shame to not upgrade the stock, and I just may. I’ve not completely decided. I’ve plenty of time yet to entertain the idea.
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Buy the ticket, take the ride. Hunter S. Thompson Last edited by John B White; 05-30-2026 at 12:39 AM.. Reason: Bourbon |
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| The Following 3 Users Say Thank You to John B White For Your Post: |
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#34 | ||||||
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I reached out to Black Diamond this morning and this is the message I received,
"Hi, thank you for contacting us. Our books are currently closed to repair and service work. I apologize for this. Matthew Horninger Stockmaker, Black Diamond Gunworks LLC. (513)889-9914, matthewahco@gmail.com" |
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| The Following User Says Thank You to Tom Gagnon For Your Post: |
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#35 | |||||||
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Quote:
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#36 | ||||||
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Matthew has periodically “closed” his books. In a way to manage backlog. You have to do it somehow. If you take every job that comes to you, it can and will get very out of control.
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B. Dudley |
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| The Following 10 Users Say Thank You to Brian Dudley For Your Post: |
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#37 | ||||||
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Understood, Thank you for the info,
Tom |
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#38 | ||||||
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Brian is correct. Small specialty businesses like a gunsmith sometimes get to a point with work that has come in you're way better off to tell a prospective customer that you are currently overloaded and not taking anything else in. I build custom outdoor equipment and run into this nearly every fall. We take a phone number and will be glad to call you when we have cleared some of the backed up work. Way better to be honest with the gent than taking it in when you know you won't get to it for months.
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| The Following 5 Users Say Thank You to Keith Doty For Your Post: |
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#39 | ||||||
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I learned long ago that i can do a finite amount of work and to take anything additional leads to not only customer disappointment but my wasting the time i should be working trying to explain why i have not gotten to someones work. I am not in the gun trade but my work could pile up if i let it. Some of my best customers have come from others who promised too much and could not deliver.
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| The Following User Says Thank You to Daniel Carter For Your Post: |
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