Damascus Steel Shotgun Barrels.
Ever seen them? They are beautiful. Certainly to me, and I bet to some of you.
You see em advertised in those reprints of the Montgomery Ward and Sears catalogs from 1906 or so.
And they are for sale at gunshows with other antique items.
The conventional wisdom you hear from gun store clerks around the ol' pot belly stove, jawin', about them old shotties is don't you dare shoot em! They were made for black powder cardboard cartridges. If you put something in there with modern smokeless powder you'll just blow up them barrels!
Meh. Sound like bushwa to me.
If I was a gun manufacture from around 1912 I'd spread that word around too. "Don't shoot grand daddy's shotgun! Or even daddy's! What with the new gunpowder what you need are some of these new fangled all steel barrels that we just happen to sell. And forget what we said about them damascus barrels back 15 years ago when we sold you that. That we had ad copy then that we loaded it with a proof round with 5 times the normal measure of powder to test every gun barrel...."
You are more likely to break the old stock that to break that old barrel.
If I had one, I'd shoot it. Prolly for clays only though, out of an abundance of caution. Rock dove. Pheasant. I don't think goose hunting is the way to go. Or deer, in my case. But #7 birdshot, sure. Well, if the gun was made by an American or English maker. Something churned out by the Ottoman's is another matter.
Crazier Than a Shithouse Rat on Meth
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5 comments:
Probably want to avoid steel shot, at the very least, and make your own reduced-power shotshells.
As I understand it, early smokeless powder shotgun loads mirrored black powder pressures and Damascus barreled shotguns while beautiful aren’t as strong as I understand it. Modern loading are hotter. I’m sure you could research and make comparable loads
My grandpah had a double barreled shottie made with wire barrels. My brother still has it. And yes, you CAN'T shoot modern loads in it. Perhaps that's where the injunction against shooting old shotguns got it's start.
Ah reckon ah'm jes a stoopid ol' gun store clerk, and imagined them blowed-up shotguns. *shrug*
And it's not like a gunsmith sees a lot of 100 year old damascus shotties. I mean, if you banana peeled great grandpa's gun, you don't go to the repair shot and ask the guy 'can you fix this?' You know already.
Why are they taking blowed up old guns to the gunstore, tho? Larfs?
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