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04-14-2024, 02:43 PM | #33 | |||||||
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Could you direct me to the page in the TPS where this is stated. I can't find it. Thank you! Bob Jurewicz |
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04-14-2024, 02:46 PM | #34 | ||||||
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You’ll find it in Vol. 1 Pg. 179.
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Wild Skies Since 1951 |
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04-14-2024, 04:28 PM | #35 | ||||||
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Greg,
Thank you! So. Does this mean that the first 150 16 Ga barrels didn't have the Kreighoff Stamp and about 350 more did. Or, were there another 500? Bob Jurewicz |
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04-14-2024, 04:37 PM | #36 | ||||||
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Deleted
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"I'm a Setter man. Not because I think they're better than the other breeds, but because I'm a romantic - stuck on tradition - and to me, a Setter just "belongs" in the grouse picture." George King, "That's Ruff", 2010 - a timeless classic. |
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04-14-2024, 05:59 PM | #37 | |||||||
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Do we even know the approximate quantity of Krieghoff produced barrels for Parker Reproductions? Was there about 150, 500, or even more? At the time when TPS was being written the authors reported “We are not sure of the exact quantity of 16-gauge barrels produced but have information that it was about 150.” In the article Nick Sisley wrote for Shotgun Sports magazine after interviewing Jack Skeuse he wrote: “Before Tom Skeuse died he had an idea, an ambition, a dream. He wanted to take some of the DHE 20 bores and have them fitted with 16-gauge barrels. But once the Japanese factory closed shop. Jack figured that dream of his dad's was gone. "But I knew it was a great idea, one set of 20-bore barrels for quail, woodcock, grouse, plus a set of 16-gauge barrels on that very small 20-bore frame for pheasants and any upland game bigger than a quail encountered at slightly longer distances. With the advances in shotshells, of course, the 16 bore takes on added positive dimensions. “So, Jack contracted with one of the worlds-known gunmakers Krieghoff in Ulm, Germany. He sent 500 DHE 20-gauge Parker Reproductions to them, and they fit 16-gauge barrels precisely to the 20-gauge receivers. Each, of course, was individually done. It was with a set of 16-gauge Krieghoff barrels I shot the ruffed grouse referred to in my opening paragraph. Those barrels were fit to the 20-gauge Parker frame. Jack Skeuse spoke of these 16/20 combos. "In 1994 this was our best-selling gun. Three-quarters of them are already sold." As Ed Muderlak would say … “The investigation continues…”
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04-14-2024, 06:39 PM | #38 | ||||||
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Shown below are 16ga barrels that I believe were added to the 20ga frame in the picture - "through Regeant" (as described by original owner).
Therefore, creating a "factory" 16/20 set. |
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05-30-2024, 12:00 PM | #39 | ||||||
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God bless you Marty for remembering your Dad and recognizing him
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06-11-2024, 04:59 PM | #40 | ||||||
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Wild Skies
Great post and info. I recently purchased a 28GA 2-bbl set on Gunbroker. It came with the same paperwork you listed, as well as the original bill of sale from GU, Omaha. It was in a pawn shop in rural NC and the sellers didn’t know much about it, because it was their late uncles. They had the 26” listed as IC/ M, but when I talked with them, they sent me some pics. It was actually Q1/Q2! NIB as well. Apparently the owner just kept it in the case and in a safe since purchase. Upon receipt, the breech faces where pristine, so confirmed NIB. Been enjoying it on the sporting clays course, and can’t wait to hunt with it in the fall. Wonderful piece of American shotgun history, with a great story to boot. |
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