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Nice Butt
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I was wondering how many different butt plates Parker made. On my 12 ga hammer made in 1877 the butt plate has a dog with bird in his mouth. Ive seen others with just a dog. Also i'm wondering what material mine is made of. |
From what I know, there are at least 5 variations of the dog's head marked Parker Brothers and one marked Parker on Remington Parkers. These are made from hard rubber a.k.a. "gutta percha" Very early guns had a solid steel butt plate and then there is the skeleton steel butt plate used on some higher grades. If memory serves me, there is also a checkered version with no butt plate - just wood?? Stand to be enlightened if there are other variations or any erroneous info here.
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There are good examples in the Parker Story forget which volume
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Some one else ask a similar question a few years back ,it has taken me a while to locate this but I knew I had it in the old hard drive ! Taken from the Parker Serialization Book ! Russ
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The early hammer guns had a plate that is brown instead of black. Like the first photo. Does this mean they are made from a different material?
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Parker butt plates were all made from gutta percha except maybe some of the last Remington plates. some of these early plates have turned a brown hue with age. Some fellas on here have devised some ingeneous ways of restoring the original color.
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Hi Dave ,I know some one will get a kick out of such a stupid question ,BUTTTTTT What exactly is " Gutta Percha " and does anyone know of any other applications for it ? Okay you can laugh now !!!:rotf:
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There ya go Russ....Thanks for the link Jack!
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Hows that go ,We should learn something new every day , well , just hang around here a while ,YOU WILL !!
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not to be confused with "gut a perch"
http://t3.gstatic.com/images?q=tbn:A...MykKpeJ9QxPk93 credit: google images |
Same idea as the Chicle' trees in Central America that are tapped for the 'rubber' that is used in chewing gum; think Chiclets.... We used to find trees with the telltale V pattern cuts from the cutters in the jungle and recut one once and chewed the resultant sap - you couldn't wear it out. I'd post pics but they're Kodachrome slides. The guys who collected the gum were/are called Chicleros and are folk heroes. They go out alone into the jungle with a pack animal for weeks, collect the sap, dry it a bit and make a ball of it a few feet in diameter and bring it out of the jungle to sell for a lot of money.... all so folks can look cool chewing gum. Go figure.
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Patrick http://parkerguns.org/forums/showthread.php?t=2837 |
Tarnation; If that were a picture of a Parker/Not, you would be immediately burned by members.......so, as an old country boy.........errr, that's a bluegill, not a perch!
Forgive me. Sam Ogle |
You got me Sam. If anyone can find a pic of a perch, I'll edit the post. I found no end of perch pics but not under the knife. One thing for sure on this forum, one best have all the details in order.
Cheers, Jack |
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I'm sure there are other ideas but this worked for me. |
Black liquid shoe polish works fine!
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I really like the brown look and in no way would try to change to black. Brown looks original to me on a lifter. Dave
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John Havard asked me how to identify the frame size of a Parker stock by looking at the outside surface of the buttplate. He asked because I had identified the stock on Angel Cruz' #1 frame 16 as probably having a #0 size stock. John, the #0 size buttplate has the form of a setter puppy facing left. The #1 size buttplate generally has the form of a bird dog, probably a nineteenth century style pointer, with a woodcock in his mouth. The #2 size buttplate has a big dog's head or the front end of a similar dog, also facing left. I guess that dog is a pointer, but he could be a retriever. The #2 style buttplate is also used on the #3 and larger frame guns, all the way up to #6 and #7, as well as the #2 frame guns. The 0, 1, and 2 are stamped in the back of the original buttplates and some reproductions. #0 style buttplates are not rare on #1 frame guns, nor are #1 style buttplates rare on #0 frame guns. #0 style buttplates seem to be commonly used on #00 and #000 frame guns. Parker would do what they had to do to satisfy a customer or a weight request. I own a 12 gauge 1/2 frame Remington gun that has a skeleton buttplate that is of a smaller dimension than any 28 gauge or .410 bore gun I have owned or seen.
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Thank You Mr. Murphy....Well done.....:)
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For the benefit of us that are still learning, would it be too much to ask if someone would post pic examples of the 0, 1 & 2 buttplates? :duck:
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Thanks Bill!
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You can see them all here....
http://www.gungrip.com/items_457.html |
Another example of a #2, the retriever looking dog head with no body showing, can be seen in the fourth post of this thread. Greg, all other examples are also shown in that fourth post. Just to clarify, there are at least five dog head buttplate variations, but the markings on the back are always 0, 1, or 2. If anyone has seen another number stamped on the back, let us know.
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You're right Bill, I should have gone back and reviewed previous posts in this thread before posting my query.
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Thanks Brush Buster for taking the time to find those photos.
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The seldom seen, by me at least, buttplate identified as D-8 in The Parker Story pictures on page 1 of this thread, is seen on the hammer gun in the "Pheasants on Hammer Gun" thread on this forum. It is described as a gun made in 1878 in the TPS picture and the "pheasant gun" was a #3 frame hammer gun made in 1882. From this information, I assume this buttplate was used quite early and probably has a "2" stamped on the back. I don't own an example of that buttplate so I can't comment with confidence.
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Gutta Percha
Like the first "Link" mentions and contrary to the 2nd "Link" gutta percha is and has been used widely for well over a hundred years to fill your root canals. Most of us have some in our mouths. Best, DD
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