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1928 Trojan
2 Attachment(s)
Hello All,
I just picked up a Trojan 20 Ga. off of an online auction. When I open it up I noticed two notches on the extractor. I did strip it down and cleaned it , But I did not remove the firing pins. Could it be that it's gummed up in there , causing the pins to stick? Thanks, Harry |
You don't indicate there is a problem with your Parker. You can't remove the firing pins, because they are part of the hammer, not a separate part. The notches in the extractors are to assist in clearing the exposed firing pins when opening the gun after firing. It is very unusual for you to have any problem in the use of your Trojan. Put two shells in the gun, move the safety forward into the firing position, find your target, pull the trigger. You should hear a loud noise, and a broken target or a dead bird.
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Thanks Bill,
I appreciate the info. I'm assuming Parker did this for the Trojan , because my VH doesn't have these notches, and I've never noticed them on any other Parker I've handled. I did have a little trouble opening the action the first time I shot doubles with it thought. It only happened the once, that's why I asked the question. It really is a sweet shooter. 28" barrels 0 frame 6lbs. 3oz. choked full and fuller as far as I can tell. |
Handle enough Parkers and you will see those relief cuts on many of them, especially in the early, not-rebounding hammer guns. Offhand, I think at least two of my guns have them.
Having said that, I suspect the reliefs in your gun are not Parker work. They appear rough, as though done with a Dremmel or some such grinder. |
Thanks Edgar
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The earlier hammerless guns had the cuts in the extractors. But they stopped with that by the turn of the century. Your trojan should not have them given the time of manufacture. So they were likely added for some reason by someone.
The firing pins are attached to the hammers and cannot “stick”. |
I would suspect someone had trouble opening the gun after both barrels were fired, the hammers/firing pins sticking in inferior primers, and this is the remedy they thought of, which it was not. Could have been dirty chambers, swollen shells also, or non-resized reloads. Once the action starts opening, the hammers start retracting.
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Or the extractor was simply old stock when the gun was manufactured. Keeping in mind that the Trojan was designed and produced as a cost-saving utility gun.
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This all makes sense. Thanks
Harry |
Looking at 124947 photo the top where the rib extension was on earlier models, there is a void in the solder. Two questions: Are the barrels Trojan Steel and do all the serial numbers match? If not to either question, was a rib extension cut off the barrels?
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