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Unread 12-15-2020, 12:07 PM   #1
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Ed Norman
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The gun fitter has been fitting for about 30 years, he has a whole section about eye dominance, central eye dominance, sitting in front of a computer screen all day can change eye dominance to central etc. If you pm me I will see if I can send the study booklet to you as a gift. I will also try to send you to a website that has a piece by Michael McIntosh about fitting that is on their website. Thanks again this has really been interesting.
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Unread 12-15-2020, 04:18 PM   #2
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The way I have always looked at it is if a person is interested in owning and shooting vintage guns why bother with a fit? The odds of finding a 100 year old Parker with the dimensions that a "fitter" would come up with are slim to none. Sure you could possibly find one "close" but unless one is willing to re-stock, modify the stock or make some other kind of modification to a vintage gun what good is a fit? Personally I don't like messing with nice original guns so I have to "try" to adjust to whichever gun I am shooting. Could I have better results with a gun re-stocked to my fit? Possibly. Am I willing to do that? No.
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Unread 12-15-2020, 04:31 PM   #3
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I think it's my original post that is being interpreted wrong, and it's probably my wording. I never intended to restock a classic gun for the sake of fitting it to me just to shoot it. I was trying to find out the most direct way of taking a current set of fitting parameters, which I have, and see what is out there that will translate to a shootable gun and allow me to hit a barn. For example does LOP on a single trigger roughly translate to the front of a DT? Is cast much different SxS compared to O/U. I think I've gotten the answer already and it's been helpful, and I thank the many PM's I've received which have been invaluable. Great forum.

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Originally Posted by Reggie Bishop View Post
The way I have always looked at it is if a person is interested in owning and shooting vintage guns why bother with a fit? The odds of finding a 100 year old Parker with the dimensions that a "fitter" would come up with are slim to none. Sure you could possibly find one "close" but unless one is willing to re-stock, modify the stock or make some other kind of modification to a vintage gun what good is a fit? Personally I don't like messing with nice original guns so I have to "try" to adjust to whichever gun I am shooting. Could I have better results with a gun re-stocked to my fit? Possibly. Am I willing to do that? No.
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Unread 12-15-2020, 05:17 PM   #4
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Originally Posted by Andrew Sacco View Post
I think it's my original post that is being interpreted wrong, and it's probably my wording. I never intended to restock a classic gun for the sake of fitting it to me just to shoot it. I was trying to find out the most direct way of taking a current set of fitting parameters, which I have, and see what is out there that will translate to a shootable gun and allow me to hit a barn. For example does LOP on a single trigger roughly translate to the front of a DT? Is cast much different SxS compared to O/U. I think I've gotten the answer already and it's been helpful, and I thank the many PM's I've received which have been invaluable. Great forum.
I recall reading in an issue of SSM that Chris Batha, an Englishman with over 30 years of experience fitting shotguns, writing that he had found a S X S requires a 1/2" longer LOP than an O&U for most individuals.
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Unread 12-15-2020, 05:30 PM   #5
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Originally Posted by Greg Baehman View Post
I recall reading in an issue of SSM that Chris Batha, an Englishman with over 30years of experience fitting shotguns, writing that he had found a S X S requires a 1/2" longer LOP than an O&U for most individuals.
This is kind of what I'm looking for Greg. I did a Google search and search here. That being said, my LC Smith is 13 7/8" LOP and seems to feel a foot short. My repro is pretty close to my fitting but feels a tad short, but this is corrected by the clothes I wear hunting. Were I breaking clays in a T shirt it might be an issue. I have never had the pleasure of having the trigger guard smash my second knuckle and don't care to.
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Unread 12-15-2020, 06:01 PM   #6
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I am no expert in this matter of gun fit, but like many have said, I chased gun fit from Orvis Shooting School to New England Custom Guns. All I did was left confused as each gave me different numbers. I have learned that as long as the LOP was not extreme, or the DAC, I could adapt to shoot that gun.
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