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AyA #2
Anyone own one of these or familiar with the gun and care to comment? I am looking at the 16gauge cased color.
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Though I have never personally owned an Aya gun my understanding is they are of great quality and workmanship. I have come close to buying one but just never took the jump.
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I just got a 28 ga and love it. Billy
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Handled one at the Wheeling Cabelas-16 ga. Great gun, I think they were asking about $5900.
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Yes, I have hunted with a 28ga and bought a 20 ga for my nephew. I like them a lot and I think they are a great shotgun for the price. At least they were when I was using them about 10 years ago. I especially like the #2.
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I shoot a #2 28" .410 rounded body and think it is a great gun. In the last few years the prices have gone over the top, but we can't do much about that. My .410 was a gift from a friend and I never would have paid the retail price at the time. In the last few years, the retail seems to have gone up about $2000. If I ever buy another, it will be on the used gun market.
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They are a quality gun by a very well established firm. If an AYA filled the need I was looking for I wouldn't hesitate to buy one.
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Since we are on the subject of AYA ,is there a specific way to tell the Grades apart from one another ? The used ones I have run across " which are few " ,,I have never been able to tell the #1 from the # 2 and usually the Gun shop owner has no idea and the couple guns I have recently found have been on consignment and I am not sure the owner even knows what Grade they are !
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shotgunworld.com has a Spanish Guns subforum where that question has been addressed. You might bring it up again. By the way, NECG is now asking $6295 for my rounded frame #2. When I worked in a gun store a few years ago, we bought #2s from NECG for $2500 and retailed them for about $3100.
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3 Attachment(s)
The top pic is an AyA #1 which is hand engraved and has a higher level of finish to both wood and metal than the #2. The second pic is an AyA #2 which is mechanically (rolled) engraved. This particular gun has the rolled engraving properly applied, many examples you will find the engraving is not perfectly centered around the cocking indicators. (For the life of me I cannot figure out why AyA can't get this right--especially with a gun at this price point). The third pic is an example of a #2 with poorly applied off-centered engraving.
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Greg ,Is there any stamping on the Barrel Flats or Water Table to designate the first one being a #1 and the other a # 2 ? Thank You for the pictures ! I know where there are a couple of these ,one in 20 Ga. but don't know how to tell the difference ,both are in nice shape and appear to be # 2's ! Russ
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No, not in the same sense as Parkers are stamped in regards to the grade. On the water table of comtempory AyA's and other Spanish doubles you will typically find the maker's marks, proof stamps, S/N's, gauge and chamber length. The barrel flats will have the same water table stamps and additionally there will be stamps with the barrel weight in grams and what the barrels were proofed at in bars. On the barrels themselves, just ahead of the barrel flats will be the choke designation and the bore diameter in millimeters.
The pics I posted were the standard engraving patterns of the AyA #1 and #2 grades, but the Spanish are custom gun builders and will build anything the client desires. i.e. In theory you could buy a #2 with #1 wood or #1 engraving or some other custom engraving, etc. Russ, if you are seriously considering one of those AyA's you could call Carmen at AyA (860/388-3989), she's a Spanish lady that works in the USA for AyA, give her the complete S/N and she could look up in AyA's records as to the grade. |
Greg ,I really don't know how serious I am but each time I go in and the 20 is looking at me ,I always have to handle it a bit ,and I know the proprietor is just itching for me to make an offer ," Any Offer " I believe !
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I would buy that last pictured #2 regardless of the off center engraving.
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I own an AYA #2, and depending on how old the gun is determines how they are engraved. Older models are all done by hand similar to the #1. Also depending on how they are ordered your gun can have upgrades. My #2 has gold turned internals that only the #1 has, also I have extra fancy wood. When I spoke with the gentleman from AYA at the Shot Show last year they said the new models would be machine rolled and the hand chased engraving. Once you hit the #1 grade and up it's all done by hand.
Last note: They are a very high quality spanish gun. You wont be upset. |
Russ the odds are that it's a #2 gun as there are more of them around. I passed on a #1 10 years or so ago because it was a 20 and I was looking for a 16. I still regret that one. The #2 should be under $4K I would think.
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Thanks everyone for their responses and when I am in the Lebanon area I will check them out real closely. Moving toward seriously. I understand NECG will fit the gun when purchased.
When I was looking for reviews on line some one referred to the AyA owners as a Purdy wanna-be. Now I covet the purdys but that wasn't very nice. Don't think I'd want him in my duck boat. Have some family connections in Spain and was drooling over the AyA catalog with the 80 year old patriarch. I send him all my duck pictures and he gets to relive some of his younger days. Love to buy one just to have him shoot it. |
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I believe you are talking about the lower grades, in that case you would be correct. #2's can be ordered several ways, as in mine is a "deluxe" and does not have standard engraving. Either way you want to see it they are a well made gun.
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Well now, these are a bit over my head, but...back in the day, as they say, I bought an AYA 20 ga, from of all places, Sears-Roebuck. It was marked either Sears by AYA, or AYA for Sears, or something along those lines. It was a 20 ga, with 28" barrels, mod/full, and 3" chambers. I was told at the time that AYA apprentences made them for Sears as part of their training.
The Sears store I delt with at the time had two of them in stock, a 12, and a 20. The 20 was by far the nicer of the two, with really nice wood, and some simple, rather understated engraving. The receiver IIRC, was color case hardened. I paid, IIRC, $199.00 for it about 1978-79 or so. A very nice gun, and one of the very few I regret selling. It probably was the nicest gun I've ever owned. |
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