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#23 | ||||||
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Roundsworth, that is a gun worth having and shooting. Congratulations.
Dennis |
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The Following User Says Thank You to Dennis V. Nix For Your Post: |
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#24 | ||||||
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A gun with two triggers and the same choke in each barrel is not much of a mystery. The two trigger choice is because it goes bang every time the trigger is pulled. That is not always the result in a single trigger gun.
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#25 | ||||||
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I grew up on single trigger guns and the best way to get used to DT is to have a proper gun fit. I have a couple of Parkers with SST as well as my H&H 20 and have had no problems with any of them.
I hunt with a pointing dog and have never switched either barrels or triggers for the first shot. I recall a target presentation at the Southern where the first bird was farther out and I used the back trigger first but it would have been just as easy to select the left barrel with a SST gun. |
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The Following User Says Thank You to Rich Anderson For Your Post: |
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#26 | |||||||
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One of my favorites is a BHE choked 6k right bbl, 40k left bbl. Switching from Skeet to Full is instantanious In contrast, my live bird gun with has a Miller trigger, and is full/full. (and no safety) The closest you will come to magic in a field gun, is straight grip, double trigger gun, choked Skeet/Mod, or Cyl/Lt Mod. |
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#27 | ||||||
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Kenny, according to W.W. Greener (The Gun and Its Development), the single trigger on a "double-barrelled" gun appeared at least as early as the late 17th century. Greener stated "the single trigger undoubtedly possesses advantages over the two-trigger gun, principally the facility with which two barrels can be fired in rapid succession; the same length of stock is secured (LOP)-with most mechanisms- for both barrels, and there is no necessity to relax the grip of the stock. What these advantages mean to the sportsman can only be fully appreciated by a fair trial at game."
For gun manufacturers the choice was simple, the competition had them, people wanted them and were willing to pay. |
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#28 | ||||||
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This is a great thread. I agree with just about all the posters and particularly with Todd. I too feel that SK or Cyl and Mod or Full are just about the perfect combo for a field or target gun. Shooters in the early 20th century must have also felt this way as there are a lot of guns choked open/tight. I love double triggers for their dependability. When I was younger I sought out single trigger Parkers because that's what I was used to. Now, I know that DT guns were the choice of many, many shooters of that era. Must have been a good reason for that.
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#29 | ||||||
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They go "off" every time you pull one of the triggers. The single trigger, not always.
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The Following User Says Thank You to Bill Murphy For Your Post: |
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Bill, you must be talking about properly cocked hammer guns. I cannot remember the last sxs shoot I was at where I did not see a target launched, and some shooter with a double trigger hammerless gun swing on it, pull on the trigger and when nothing happens say something about the "damn safety". I am often one of them.
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