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I seen that one the other day the plaid table cloth guy, also Im not 100% sure but that doesnt look like a grade 2?
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#4 | ||||||
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A decade later Chamberlin Cartridge Co. (1886-87 catalog) offered special loads with oversize wads for Parker Bros. guns.
1886-7 page 6 Parker Load Highlighted.jpg 1886-7 page 7 Parker Load Highlighted.jpg When our major ammunition manufacturers began offering factory loaded shells in the 1890s, we see no such foolishness. |
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The Following 2 Users Say Thank You to Dave Noreen For Your Post: |
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I have a 11 ga parker hammer gun once owned by Austin Hogan...10 ga paper shell will not go in the chamber...12 ga shell to loose in chamber but will fire in it....11 ga shell would be just right but I do not have a 11 ga shell to try it....charlie
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The Following User Says Thank You to charlie cleveland For Your Post: |
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That's because you have a real 11 gauge. There was a good article in an older DGJ about one.
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#8 | ||||||
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I did a scan of the available Union Metallic Cartridge Co. catalogs/price sheets/broadsides. The 1873 price list offers brass shells from 8 to 14 gauge. The 1877 E. Remington & Sons catalog offers both A & B 10- and 12-gauge brass shells and 16B brass shells. I only found No. 11 brass shells offered in the 1880 and 1882 (No. 11B) UMC catalogs.
1880 empty brass shotshells.png Everything 1884 and later no No. 11 shells. Nothing I've found offers a No. 11 paper shell. |
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Art, can you please point me to the order books and stock books that show this? I haven't seen this documented in my 10 years of looking at the records.
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#10 | |||||||
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The chart on page 519 lists bores as typical modern sizes, and these are quoted by a lot of people as standard for Parkers. This is only strictly true after 1920 I believe. Up through around 1880 it probably wasn't true, and may or may not have been from the 1800's to sometime closer to 1920. There also appears in that book a picture of a tag distributed with guns of that vintage which gave Parkers optimum load for the 10 gauge and they recommended loading the shells with 9ga over powder and overshot wads. I have also been told in a response about stampings that one of the marks with no known meaning is an "O" found on some 12 gauges. If the Parker Story info is accurate, that could well explain that mark. If some members have O marked 12 gauge barrels, it would be interesting to see their bore measurements. One thing I have never seen is any similar discussion about the 16 gauge. I have one from 1901, but it is a standard 16 ga bore size. If any lifter model 16 owners have measured their bores, it would be interesting to know if any are overbored. |
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