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07-05-2009, 04:30 AM | #3 | ||||||
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Sorry Dan not in the Book.
Bob Jurewicz |
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07-05-2009, 09:03 AM | #4 | ||||||
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Kevin Pickett, the owner of River Hills Sporting Clays in Boonville, knows guns and has a nice Parker collection. Have him look at it. Sounds like an early GH 12 ga but its possible it could be a 16 with unusually long barrels for most 16's. A 14ga would be very uncommon.
The Parker ID and Serialization Book sells for about $35. |
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07-05-2009, 12:25 PM | #5 | ||||||
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Thanks for the information. I was really hoping there was something there after I checked on the first site I came to and it said there were records but it didn't say what. Do you know where I can pick the book for that price? I checked Amazon and it was $68. I'm a carpenter and things are slow so trying to keep my new Parker addiction on the dl before the wife gives me that look LOL . Thanks for that contact too Mr Day, I'll give him a call on Monday and see if he's willing to look at it. If its not in the book but the website says there is information on it, would it be worth getting the Parker letter for it or not?
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07-05-2009, 02:26 PM | #6 | ||||||
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Dan, here's my assessment.
1. see www.bluebookinc.com for the Parker ID and SN book. Price $35. Since your gun SN is not there and you are only interested in learning about your gun, don't buy the book. 2. A research letter is available, but unlikely to show anything more than original shipment to a distributor. Its a base grade gun and unlikely to show anything more, but it's something I would do because I have $40 to spend and I like to know the history. 3. Your gun was a very common form of Parker, a GH, over 18,000 were made. Its highly likely to be in original configuration. I can't tell more without photos. 4. Your major issue is what cartridge this gun is made for. For that you need to take chamber and barrel inside diameter measurements and post them here. Or you can put 12, 16 and 20 ga shells in and see what fits. If none do, then you fall back on ID measurements and you need to post them here. 5. Shooting. You need to know whether the barrels have been bored out and are not original ID. If so, you need to find out wall thickness. If you have original wall thickness, often around .035 in Parkers, and there are no barrel dents, bulges, cracks, rust under the ribs, etc, then Parker original service psi limits apply, which went up to around 10,000 in a 12, but since I don't know what ga you have, I don't know what service limits apply. Its always a good idea to usually use loads less than service limit in any gun, damascus or fluid, modern or old, and many people here load their own or buy shells from RST. Last edited by Bruce Day; 07-05-2009 at 02:57 PM.. |
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07-05-2009, 11:49 PM | #7 | ||||||
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Thank you again Mr Day, I think I will go ahead and get the letter, if for nothing more than to save a bit of its history and time spent for someone down the family tree, although so far I have quite enjoyed what I've learned, would have been nice to have gotten it from one of my ancestors even if it was in the form of a letter. I was lucky enough to find a piece of paper in my model 97 stock where the original owner had put the date he bought it and where, kinda like history reaching out. I'm actually glad to hear it was one of the more common, that usually means I would be able to get parts should I ever need any. On the gauge, I know its not a 12, the shells I have won't fit into the bore and I just moved and haven't unpacked the boxes with ammo so nothing else to go off of that way but I do have a dial caliper and a micrometer so tomorrow evening I'll post some pictures and sizes. Now I'm really kicking myself for getting rid of my reloading tools. Looking forward to learning more and I'm glad I found this site.
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07-06-2009, 05:52 AM | #8 | ||||||
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Dan, try abebooks.com
I find one there for $34.95. It may or may not still be available. Type Parker gun identification serialization Author Charles E. Price |
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07-06-2009, 08:23 AM | #9 | ||||||
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You threw us a curve when you said you couldn't get a 12 gauge shell into the "bore". Into which end of the bore were you attempting to insert the shell? The shell should fit into the back end. It will not fit into the front end if it is a 12 gauge gun. The serial number of your gun is in the right range for a 14 gauge gun, but a 32" 14 gauge would be a very rare gun. Keep in touch when you measure the bores and chambers.
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07-09-2009, 12:43 AM | #10 | ||||||
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LOL Bill, I have shot plenty of doubles before so I know which end the shell goes in, but I can see from other posts that its always better to mention that just in case. I snapped some pictures tonight and hopefully I can get them on here. The only problem I have now is I was at the gun range and someone was looking it over while I was talking to the range guy and they dryfired it and now it seems the firing pins won't retract. Everything worked like a champ up until that point. I can take the forearm off and then it will break open but the pins will not return to the cocked position. I'd say this has happened before because there are notches in the ejectors where they have rubbed a few times. Any ideas?
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