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those pictures sure got me started off rite this morning...yall are luky fellas indeed to have those long barrel sweethearts..thanks yall have made my day... thomas i hope my little squirl dog will learn that trick about going around the tree...shes a year old jacj russel...acually shes my grand daughters when shes not home she comes to my house at 7.00 sharp every morning...josh did lefever make any long barrel small bores... thanks fellas got to go work in the garden.... charlie
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Charlie no doubt Uncle Dan made some long barrel small gauge guns. He would build anything the customer wanted. The only example I have, however, is a transitional gun made in the late 1880s early 1890s. It is one of the last of the rod cocker, pivot opener, 16 gauge F grade (without dogs) 30 inch damascus barrels.
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I have a Lefever C Grade 16 g with 30" barrels in the 46xxx range. Its a dream at the trap range.
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Steve, I have an early pivot lever 16 also, an E Grade, #9568. What is your serial number? I thought my gun may have been the first 16 automatic hammerless, but there are a few before it.
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Bill the serial number on my gun is 4003 later than yours (13571) so your gun is definitely older than mine but the way Lefever played with serial numbering I don't know if anyone could tell with any degree of certainty when either gun was built. As stated earlier my gun predates the dog and bird engraving on the side plates but does have a variation of the engraving pattern found on the late G and H grades only much larger on the side plates but no engraving on the receiver. Another interesting thing is that my gun does not have the double X symbol denoting a small frame as found on the later small frame guns although the receiver measurements are almost exactly the same as my late production G grade 16 gauge.
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