Scattergun Madness...
I picked up the 1969 Browning A-5 Light 12 mid April; hadn't shot one in 40 years and I'd forgotten what a great shotgun they are. It fits like it was built for me, it is perfectly balanced and fast in the hands. With field loads, this shotgun it kicks so little it does not need a pad.
Youngest son and I ran through a box of clays with the Browning ASAP. I was calling for birds with the gun at high port, safety on, and shooting when the bead caught the bird. Think I missed one of 35 or so and usually, there wasn't a dime sized piece that hit the ground. I'm not a great wingshot but this gun is a natural hitter for me.
Then an old beater 311A Stevens chased me home. I tripped over this at a rural pwn shop last Friday. They wanted $150 OTD. I did take it out back and shoot it, patterns a bit low and loose for its 30" barrels, but the bores had light rust and may be shredding shot cups. I figured if it was still there Monday I was supposed to rescue it.
Well, it was still there. I had dropped a set of micrometers in my back pocket and pulled the barrels off to check the chokes. The left barrel came in at a tight full and the right one fell between modified and improved. Hmm... the left barrel was always the more open choke on these guns. Also when I popped the forend off, the ejector activator came loose from the forend metal and skittered across the floor. The screw that holds it to the forend metal had broken off. It is captured by the hinge pin so I replaced it carefully, bringing the extractors back to life.
My pal who works there was looking all sheepish and I said "Guys, this is a hunnerd dollar shotgun at best. I don't know what you have in it but I'll go a hundred and throw in seven boxes of 20 gauge field loads (which we have no shotgun for and I miraculously had in the truck today) so you make a buck on it" The opposition huddled, the deal was agreed to and the old double came home today.
I took ten clay birds out to the thrower and powdered nine of them, alternating barrels. Short stocked old bastard kicks like a mule and a good pad is getting ordered while I de-crud the action, polish/reblue the barrels and (after the pad arrives) refinish the stock. For no good reason I love it.
I got most of the metal work done today, so bear with me while I post more photos. This old shotgun was made in 1949 so it had 67 years worth of crud caked in and on it. 3M fine pads and 0000 steel wool got most of it off and produced a finish appropriate for a working gun. The action got soaked in PB Blaster, douched with carb cleaner and a light coat of Rem Oil left inside. The receiver is staying as-is for the moment. FWIW, Brownell's Oxpho Blue is some good stuff for cold blue- miles ahead of Birchwood Casey. Stock work begins in a few days.
Complete thread:
- Scattergun Madness... -
Sarge,
2016-04-26, 23:31
- Nice job on the Stevens. -
Hoot,
2016-04-27, 05:03
- Nice job on the Stevens. -
uncowboy,
2016-04-27, 06:10
- Nice job on the Stevens. - Sarge, 2016-04-27, 11:31
- Nice job on the Stevens. -
uncowboy,
2016-04-27, 06:10
- Scattergun Madness... - Bryan Pettet, 2016-04-27, 07:19
- Nice job on the Stevens. -
Hoot,
2016-04-27, 05:03