 |
|
 |
|
| Notices |
Welcome to the new PGCA Forum! As well, since it
is new - please read the following:
This is a new forum - so you must REGISTER to this Forum before posting;
If you are not a PGCA Member, we do not allow posts selling, offering or brokering firearms and/or parts; and
You MUST REGISTER your REAL FIRST and LAST NAME as your login name.
To register:
Click here..................
If you are registered to the forum and keep getting logged
out: Please
Click Here...
Welcome & enjoy!
To read the Posts, Messages & Threads in the PGCA Forum, you must be REGISTERED and LOGGED INTO your account! To Register, as a New User please see the Registration Link Above. If you are registered, but not Logged In, please Log in with your account Username and Password found on this page to the top right.
|
 |
|
 |
06-12-2018, 11:45 AM
|
#1
|
Member
|
PGCA Lifetime Member Since Second Grade
|
Member Info
|
Join Date: Jun 2009
Posts: 16,902
Thanks: 6,990
Thanked 10,339 Times in 5,456 Posts
|
|
The question about the .000 X .018 Lefever brings to mind my discovery about my grandfather's Lefever 1887 pigeon gun. I was devastated as a young man when I found that the right barrel on his gun was .000 and he was a dedicated pigeon shooter who owned his own ring in Hazleton, PA. On thinking about it, he was, according to my dad, a one gun shooter who was not known to shoot any gun except the E grade Lefever. The ANSWER is that northeast pigeon shoots in the early days were one shot events. The left barrel was used for competitive pigeon shoots and the combination of open and full made the same gun a great hunting gun. I never assume that a cylinder and full gun made before 1910 was opened up. I will later post my solution to the question about opening chokes. It always causes posters to accuse me of being uppity. The solution is "Learn to shoot". I usually follow up such uppity posts with an invitation to spend a day with me at my club, shooting full choke guns at skeet and sporting clays birds. It isn't rocket science, it's just changing to a different method of addressing the birds.
|
|
|
|
The Following 2 Users Say Thank You to Bill Murphy For Your Post:
|
|
|
06-12-2018, 12:20 PM
|
#2
|
Member
|
|
|
Member Info
|
Join Date: Apr 2017
Posts: 3,308
Thanks: 5,188
Thanked 6,845 Times in 2,165 Posts
|
|
Following along the lines of shooting Sporting Clays with F/F guns as Bill mentioned I can tell you that when we shoot SC here we usually shoot 2 rounds due to the driving distance. Most always I shoot the 1st round with my go to SC gun which has interchangeable chokes and the 2nd round with a F/F Parker, usually a 34". I really cannot recall a single day when there was much difference in the score at all, a bird or 2 maybe, some times the F/F was the higher score.
|
|
|
|
The Following 3 Users Say Thank You to Randy G Roberts For Your Post:
|
|
|