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-   -   Hammerless Lifter (https://parkerguns.org/forums/showthread.php?t=32397)

jefferyconnor 02-04-2021 04:24 AM

Hammerless Lifter
 
I thought I came across a post discussing these but can't find it again with a few different searches. Does anyone have pictures they could post? Also, I was wondering if anyone has a estimated production count? If I remember correctly there were some made into the 1900s. Were they made on unique or special frames or modified top lever frames?
Having taken a couple Parkers apart and looking at diagrams, I'm developing the idea lifter guns had a simpler, more direct acting means of working the locking bolt. I've never handled a lifter but evidently shooters back then ultimately liked the top lever better. I'd welcome anyone's thoughts on that subject also.

Bill Murphy 02-04-2021 04:46 AM

The lifter action is very easy to operate. I seem to remember something about a hammerless lifter or maybe it was a Lefever conversion that I remember.

Dean Romig 02-04-2021 06:38 AM

Yes, and whoever designed and built it, it was experimental and never went into production by either company.





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Brian Dudley 02-04-2021 07:32 AM

The gun in question was likely the Hammerless conversion of a lifter done by Lefever arms. It was sold by Morphys maybe 5-6 years ago and is currently for sale by Puglisi. It can be seen on GI. This gun was actually converted to a manual side cocking hammerless.

Mr. Herzog owns a top action hammerless conversion. Likely also done by Lefever, but that gun is not marked as such, but the mechanics are lefever. That one was converted to an automatic hammerless action utilizing lefever cocking rod design.

Lefever was the inventor of the first commercially sucessful hammerless shotgun in America. They did hammerless conversions to many different hammer guns in the earlier days. Likely any gun that was sent to them by a customer. Much like breechloading conversions from mizzleloaders. It was a way for the earlier talented gunmakers to stay working with jobs and helping people stay up to speed with modern firearms technology but not have to buy a new gun.

Certainly any of these conversions were done in low numbers and would be rare to find today.

Daryl Corona 02-04-2021 08:24 AM

I love the underlifter design and can't understand why it went out of favor. As far as ergonomics is concerned it's a no-brainer.

jefferyconnor 02-04-2021 08:26 AM

https://www.gunsinternational.com/gu...n_id=101499602
This looks like it might be the one?

Dean Romig 02-04-2021 09:07 AM

That’s the one - and Lefever incorporated their own side-cocking design too and patented it all. Everything else is Parker Bros, right down to the engraving.





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todd allen 02-04-2021 09:28 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by jefferyconnor (Post 324526)
https://www.gunsinternational.com/gu...n_id=101499602
This looks like it might be the one?

I wonder how much this sold for.

Greg Baehman 02-04-2021 10:03 AM

At the 2014 Las Vegas Antique Arms Show there was a 12ga. Grade 3 toplever hammergun converted to hammerless that I and others had seen and handled. The ask on it was less $4K. Here's a link to that discussion and there's a link within this thread that takes you to another thread that includes a couple of pics taken by PML. I am not sure if it is the exact same gun discussed in both threads.
http://parkerguns.org/forums/showthr...ight=hammergun

edgarspencer 02-04-2021 10:40 AM

I took a double take on that two-dog engraving on the trigger guard.


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