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#3 | ||||||
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Shoot that gun as it is and check your patterns....cutting the chokes open is a one way road and must be properly performed or the new patterns could be off point of aim or just not what you wanted....Spredders are great for 12 bore guns and will not change the guns P.O.A. And if you want to go out west and hunt wild roosters it will make a great gun for that too....(-: SXS ohio
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#4 | |||||||
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Quote:
I'm toying with the idea of having the barrels re-finished, just because I love the look of the dark damascus figuring. Keith Kearcher lives just down the road from me and has done lots of work for me in the past. He is very good. The GH is pretty heavy. It is almost very heavy when compared to my Lefever and it seems heavier when compared to my Sterlingworth. However the gun balances well. The tubes are 30 inchers, but for some unknown reason they don't seem long. The barrels seem thick at the breech. Seems to me that it'd be hard to blow them up, but I've read what we have all read, and I'm going to be careful. Someone here said I should load 7/8 ounce loads. Sounds like a good idea to me. Then it'd shoot about like a lightly loaded 20 gauge. That's okay with me. I have to admit that the thought of shooting a damascus Parker is intriguing to me. "What ya shoot'en?" "A Parker." "Oh." Okay, I'm a snob. |
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#5 | ||||||
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What is the frame size? Presuming it is a 12 gauge it could be a 1-frame, a 2-frame or a 3-frame. I don't believe the 1 1/2-frame had been introduced at the time yours was made.
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#6 | ||||||
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Yep, it is a 12 and 2 frame. The gun is not light, but not nearly as heavy as a Superposed. I don't know how to weigh a gun. Step on the scales with the gun and then without and subtract the difference? I don't think bathroom scales are precise enough.
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#7 | ||||||
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Before you start working with spreader loads or changing chokes pattern your GH. You might have the patterns that you want already. I patterned my new GH on Friday and found that my right barrel was full and my left improved/modified. By the way,mine cost $200 at a gun show but it was not as nice looking as yours (it was ugly!) , It still shoots well!
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#8 | |||||||
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I fix cracks. Either I do it, or a gunsmith does, if they are difficult enough. They will spread the crack and fill it with glue. A good gunsmith can make those barrels glow like absolutely new. It'll cost you about $300 to do it though. We have one of the best gunsmiths in the country here. All he does is re-furbish old guns. He uses nothing but authentic methods. Keith Kearcher. He has a website, so you can google him. While I'm not recommending it. You can give him a really beat up gun and say, "Make it new, Keith", and he will. It'll cost about a grand. He can do the engraving, the whole bit. (He sends it out for engraving.) The only guns that I have had Keith refurbish were really in terrible shape. So terrible that they were junk. One a muzzle loading rifle and the other a muzzle loading shotgun. I didn't want the shotgun to look new, just nice and that's what he did. Now it is something to be pround of. The ancient rifle is absolutely wonderful. Doesn't look exactly new, but pretty. What shells are you shooting? |
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| The Following User Says Thank You to Steve McCarty For Your Post: |
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#9 | ||||||
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Nice gun. Undamaged by human hands.
That gun will handle about any reasonable load you want to shove through it , although you can elect to shoot lesser loads to keep it easy on you. A 1 oz or 7/8oz load makes a soft target load. That gun configuration was the workhorse for most of the existence of Parker Bros. Enjoy. |
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#10 | ||||||
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Currently I am shooting 7/8 oz of 7.5 shot in my doubles. My 1889 barrels were nicely cold blued and I will probably want to have them restored. Thanks for the info about someone who can do that kind of work. While the bore is rough as the patterns are good I will leave the bores alone, At some time in the future will have the stock replaced as the wrist repair is not the best .
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