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04-13-2013, 12:08 PM | #33 | ||||||
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I might be able to help you with the setter pup. A good friend has a well bred litter of setters on the ground right now. You can email me at esetter5@me.com and I'll give you his info.
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04-13-2013, 05:34 PM | #34 | ||||||
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Rob,
my female(in the picture) was in heat in Feb but she was quite uncooperative and it never happened. I was disappointed cause my male will be 12 this fall. Gerry, send me the info on those pups also if you can. Harold |
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broken Repro stock |
12-30-2013, 10:29 AM | #35 | ||||||
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broken Repro stock
Edwin,
I have a similar break on my parker 28 Repro. Did you send you parker to Dave wolf in Waco TX as shown in this thread- or did you go somewhere else for the repair, and were you satisfied with the results? Thanks, Mark Germain |
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12-30-2013, 06:41 PM | #36 | ||||||
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Add me to the long list of Repro 28 owners that had to restock the gun. What made me most angry was the manufacturer/distributor did absolutely nothing when I asked if it were possible to get a replacement stock from them. And this was back in 1988 as I recall. I think all the stocks on the Repros were Larch or possibly a Japanese Linden that is used for the lightweight paper covered doors used in the Japanese homes for partitions.
And, don't even get me started on the built-in defect that Larry Del Grego finally found after I sent the gun to him. It had been at the factory gunsmith twice and came back with the same problem twice. Couldn't get rid of that POS fast enough. |
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12-30-2013, 06:58 PM | #37 | ||||||
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What was the built in defect John?
__________________
"Much care is bestowed to make it what the Sportsman needs-a good gun"-Charles Parker |
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12-30-2013, 08:43 PM | #38 | ||||||
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It's not the gun that's a POS but some of the wood they used.
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12-31-2013, 08:37 AM | #39 | ||||||
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I will pay scrap price!....send them all to ME......(-:
I have fallen a few times with my repro's....They took a slam and did not brake. Im sure if a void was under the grip area it could have been bad. Parker repro's wood is petite, thin in the wrist area, like the originals. This is part of the reason they are so well liked. I do not feel they have any factory defect or inferior wood. Its a small trade off for how dynamic, light and nice the guns are. They are more fragile than say a stevens 311 or a model 21 but they do not feel clubby either. I do wish we still had the factory repair parts that were lost in the flood, and had less expensive replacement stocks for repairs when needed. I think Parker Reproductions as a company did great service to its customers.....I have had some business in the past with Richard and found him very helpful. He even sent me a surprise package of memorabilia that I still have. Thanks all SXS ohio....(-: |
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The Following 2 Users Say Thank You to Kenny Graft For Your Post: |
12-31-2013, 09:01 AM | #40 | ||||||
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On the skeet field, taking a station 8 high house straight overhead would result in the gun locking up and not opening for reload for the low house. Sometimes I could give the underside of the receiver a good whack with the heel of my hand and the gun would open. The real pain in the butt was in the hunting field when shooting at a high incoming bird caused the same problem. The gun would lock closed and not open at all. Several times it was a long walk back to the car to get my spare gun. It never happened except on that straight overhead shot. Larry Del Grego shot it and could not make it lock up until I told him of the exact situation. Then he had it happen. Upon taking it down to parts he found a burr on the spindle shaft (?), filed it off and the gun could be used. I was never relaxed shooting the gun; after the cyanide bluing rubbed off during the first hunting season, the broken stock, then that problem, I had enough and found a VH28. It was like owning an Edsel.
And, I'm not a picky guy. I can accommodate the peculiarities of life easily, but not with that Repro. |
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