Good morning all, thank you for all the positive comments on this nice old gun. Personally I can't pick a favorite engraving scene, I like them all. I only wish the one on the trigger guard was in better condition, I don't recall ever seeing another retreiver on a Parker.
Bruce I'm not a dentist but a dental technician, the difference being that dentists repair teeth, I make new ones.
I don't think of what I did with this gun as restoration, rather resurrection since the only place I added finish was the repaired areas of the stock. Everything else was removal, just revealing what was hidden.
Glued the stock up in 97 while still on active duty stationed in San Diego. We moved back to Colorado in 03 and the effects of the dryer climate are evident in that all the glue lines are now raised, visible in the first photo of the right lock around the stock teardrop. Wood shrinks, Acraglas doesn't.
The spliced-in piece of wood is visible in the first photo extending from the dog's head to the rear of the bow. My first attempt at replacing missing wood, I've done better since. Re-checkered the stock while lying flat on my back awaiting lumbar disk surgery. Not my best work but I was heavily medicated for pain, and yes if you checker a stock laying on your back the sawdust does get in your eyes. Checkering around the ball grip is a real challenge as you're working with end grain and a tight complex curve. Hat off to the the guy that did it the first time.
I did the barrels and receiver myself. Many hours and a light touch with 320 and 400 grit wet/dry paper to remove the blueing then buffing with fine steel wool. Because of the texture of the damascus, a light touch left enough blueing behind to bring out the pattern. I think it also brought out the detail in the engraving. Fortunately whoever did the polishing was pretty carefull and little damage was done. The only places where the engraving looks "melted" is at the front end of the lock plates and the burst pattern above the left firing pin.
The barrels are 26" and appear uncut although the serialization book lists it with 30" originally. Bruce and I were discussing this in another thread and I'll attach a photo of the muzzles and solicit opinions. The right bore is .765 and the left .760 with 8 to 10 thousanths of constriction. The bores are lightly pitted and have been polished, .030 wall thickness at the thinnest. I'd feel safe to shoot it but not before straightening them out a little, some dents and irregualrities remain. I'd have already done this but I don't have a set of dent raising plugs big enough, mine only going to about .740.
The frame appears to be a 1 1/2 and the gun weighs approx 7.5lbs so its a fairly lightweight 12ga lifter.
Attached are a few more photos of the barrels. The right is struck with a D forward of the flats an a small 0 on the flats. Hard to see in the photo but the left is struck with a 5 just ahead of the flats. The barrel hook is struck with a small JS and the bottom of the lug has an S. The serial number is on the rear face of the lug. D for damascus I imagine, any thoughts on the rest? The elephant ivory bead was fabricated by me, the original brass one was sheared off.
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Eric M. Baker, DTC(FMF), USN, Retired
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