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#3 | |||||||
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Thanks for responding. All of the variables contributing to final weight are part of the puzzle, as you well point out. Based on the kind of customization Parker would do for customers, I can imagine that they (Parker craftsmen) might, for example, choose less dense/lighter wood to get to a target weight. I'm looking at the barrel striking process as my focus. My 12 has just over 8 ounces taken off from the unstruck/stamped weight. I have not seen that much weight come off original barrels, and the quality control article I found in Parker Pages suggests about 12% is the average. Bottom line: this GH 12 weighs and handles like a 16 apparently by design. To me it reasserts the customization one could get when ordering even one of the lower grade offerings. BTW, I prefer 16s also. A straight grip GH like yours I'll bet is a pleasure to carry and shoot. |
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#4 | ||||||
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In all honesty I don't hunt with the GHE straight grip 16. I'm to old and to fat lug a 7.5 lb. gun through the grouse coverts. I much prefer the sub 6lb guns and while admittedly not a 12ga fan I am looking forward to hunting with a British "Light Game Gun" with some 2 inch RST paper shells this fall.
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There is no hunting like the hunting of man, and those who have hunted armed men long enough and liked it, never care for anything else thereafter...Earnest Hemingway |
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#5 | |||||||
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I'm getting to the too old, too fat point myself. I've always liked lighter guns. When you are a wild quail hunter in Northern Missouri, you walk a heck-of-a lot more than you shoot. I've latched onto 16s for this. I have Fox and Parker 16s that weigh in at under 6 lbs. My favorite gun to carry for quail is a 130 year old Cogswell and Harrison back action hammer gun with 30 inch Damascus barrels. It weighs 5 lbs. 13 ounces. I also have a Whistler 12 that is a smidgen less than 6 lbs, and my grouse gun is a little Dickson box lock (28 gauge) that weighs 5 lbs 3 oz. So, I too enjoy carrying light. I know lots of the folks on the site like to shoot clays and shoot a great deal, but for me, walking as much as I do (and as much as I can), the lighter the gun, the better. I shoot about the same with a light gun as I do with one that's heavier (as my 30-plus years of records show), but my tendinitis is better carrying a sub-6 gun. ;-) I hope you enjoy your light loads and English gun. Thanks again for sharing your guns' weights. It was my quest for lighter Parkers that started this thread in the first place. Take care! |
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#6 | ||||||
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I have a 1907 vintage GH 12, on a 1-1/2 frame, with 30 inch D3 Damascus barrels. Unstruck weight is 3-14. My little scale shows 3-4 as the final weight. According to the letter, my gun weighed 7-4 when shipped. My scale showed 7-3. Is the one ounce difference from dry wood, or barrel honing? Using snap gages, at about 8 inches from the breech, the bores measure .731". Unfortunately, my Manson gage reads .030" and .036" at 9 inches from the breech. Were they that thin when new? I dunno.
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GMC(SW)-USN, Retired 'Earnest Will' 'Desert Shield' 'Desert Storm' 'Southern Watch' |
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#7 | |||||||
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Your 10 ounce differential is the record so far! ![]() |
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