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#13 | ||||||
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After observing all this banter over the yrs on this subject, whether on Parkers or other makes, I've come to the conclusion that when I buy a gun, I simply go by the constriction to form an idea of the performance. And since I shoot a variety of ammunition types, payload weight and shot size, only patterning at whatever distance I find a need for, is truly the bottom line. I don't pattern at "standard" distances, I shoot for effective range for my load and game. I want to know the distance limit for my game-gun-load. Anything else is just 'interesting' to me.
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#14 | ||||||
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Chuck, most people who are tuning in here are interested in the original configuration of their Parker. I don't understand the nitpicking either, but the "original configuration" or original patterning information is often asked for, so I try to share the information I know. When I buy a Parker, I couldn't give a darn how it is choked as long as it will shoot. I would like it to be somewhat original in the bores, but I don't insist on it, especially in the early guns. I request a PGCA letter in the hope that I will get some ownership provenance, but patterning information is often a bonus.
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#15 | |||||||
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Quote:
I am happy with my old girl. If I do my part, she will do hers even at a 110 yrs. old. See topic: "Parker First Range Report. (Lots Of Pics.)" |
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#16 | |||||||
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Quote:
I prefer to believe there was "method" to what otherwise must be seen as "madness". This may be a bottomless pit... |
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#17 | ||||||
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Dean, I'm sure that any Parker that was patterned with the combination mentioned on the stock book or hang tag entry for the particular gun was actually patterned with the combination of components and range and target mentioned. However, the next gun on the stock book page may have been patterned with a whole different combination of components and ranges and pattern diameter. If you have the stock book info or hang tag, you know how the gun was made. Otherwise, you measure the bores and chokes before you buy the gun and not worry about how close it is to original specs. I buy guns with thick barrels and significant choke and worry about the similarity to the original specs later. I gave one instance of two guns of similar specs being patterned with different shells, even though the serial numbers were only a couple of hundred numbers apart. This is rather common. Measure the bores, write the check. Worry about the details later.
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#18 | ||||||
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In this particular discussion I'm not concerned with the patterning specs or the choke and bore measurements of a particular gun that I may want to consider buying for myself but more with the uncertain economics of what you're suggesting Parker Bros. did at the gun manufactory. It simply doesn't seem economically feasible that they would randomly pattern this 'stock' gun this way and the next 'stock' gun differently. The man-hours spent in resetting patterning plates from thirty yards out to forty then back again to thirty or thirty-five for the next gun while the guys in the other adjacent patterning tunnels were doing the same thing just can't have been approved by the superintendant. Quite probably there were four or five patterning tunnels each set at a particular yardage but even so, someone still had to give the order to pattern gun "X" at forty yards and gun "Y" at thirty-five. The question, in my mind, remains "Why and How?" I know there probably isn't answer but I can't conceive of it being a random thing. It's a quagmire...
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#19 | ||||||
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Okay, here's a thought... Guns made for stock were all left in the rack in a state of semi-completion left at full/full until such time as an order came in from a wholesale customer like Simmons Hardware in St. Louis, Mo., for example, for one-hundred, fifty shotguns with pre-specified dimensions, grades, gauge, barrel length and choke or pattern at particular yardages. Then the guns for that order were selected and patterned accordingly. Now that makes sense.
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| The Parker Pattern Board |
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#20 | ||||||
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I remember several brief passages about methods of patterning including one which implied the old board had been replaced with a new 24 inch board. I would probably spend a week turning pages to reconstruct this.
The conclusion I have drawn is that the barrel department had a grid which was used to pattern. It was probably coated with whitewash between shots. The number of pellets in a sector were counted or estimated, and multiplied by a number to state a pattern. Returning to the original question; has anyone found any pre 1920 cases? Best, Austin |
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