Dont hold back, tell us how you feel!
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Thanks, Schrapnel. What mode of operation are the Burgess shotguns?
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Here are some pictures of the gun and original catalog from burgess. The shotgun is a wrist slide action, unique to Burgess. I also have a wrist slide action 44 WCF with 2 barrels...
http://i.imgur.com/4RlW1hY.jpg
http://i.imgur.com/Vs3qgMT.jpg
http://i.imgur.com/SyCbFzZ.jpg
http://i.imgur.com/cRjUBkF.jpg
Now that is neat! Thanks for the lesson and pics.
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Well - no use beating around the bushes mate !
I currently own four bolt guns - all very effective tools ! even includes a decent model 70 winchester that I all but wore out killin stuff -- real nice pretty piece of wood too - but its just a hunk of wood and metal - dead in the hands - pick up any of the lever guns I keep for FUN and they feel alive...................
I have repro's and originals, but I have a real soft spot for the originals.
This is an 1886 production 38 WCF, and it has been USED, and I use it too. If you look carefully at the forearm just ahead of the receiver, you can see that the wood is quite visibly worn from being carried. In the interest of full disclosure, I did have to have the barrel lined as it was completely trashed. But she's a damn good shooter now!
https://i60.photobucket.com/albums/h...psg5fcpll0.jpg
https://i60.photobucket.com/albums/h...pswtji6qwy.jpg
https://i60.photobucket.com/albums/h...pschqunhns.jpg
35W
Nice rifle. I have one but I don't use it as It tarnishes quickly. Its fully nickel plated so as soon as it gets moisture on it, it goes black. Id like to buy another thats just a standard model.
I like both, These beauties are made in 1892 with consequetive 4 digit serial numbers!
https://i.imgur.com/5cXpWqf.jpg
Then there is the Pedersoli 1886 in 45/70 at a price I could afford.
https://i.imgur.com/chnKiwx.jpg
I love the originals, and still shoot them. That is what they were made to do...
http://i.imgur.com/bSfVQ6p.jpg
http://i.imgur.com/cqzF5BE.jpg
http://i.imgur.com/McElPfC.jpg
http://i.imgur.com/9MAvlQo.jpg
http://i.imgur.com/bAPlYcf.jpg
http://i.imgur.com/NFJ5nGt.jpg
http://i.imgur.com/zVERcin.jpg
Hard to beat that kind of hunting!
Them's some tuff wabbits you got there, if ya use an 1895 on 'em!!
Wish I could have some of those guns. They look really nice :)
Good morning
We shoot everything we buy. I have gone hunting corn crunchers and groundhogs with flintlocks made around 1780. Have one with parts from the 1770's. Regularly take out a 1819 Halls Breech loader. So all the rest are newer made and we are shooter / hunters.
Spencer, Frank Wesson, old caplocks, old military, right up to recent. They have no purpose but to get shot.
I'm the same way. But people these days are to scared to shoot anything that's old. Scared of their own shadow. They rather spend thousands on a conversation piece and wall hanger instead of going out and trying it. Shame. Sounds like you have nice rifles though :)
I buy guns to shoot and hunt with. Newer guns are cheaper and more available, so that’s what I’ve ended up with, although I’ve never bought a factory new lever gun. I’ll put my own wear and history on them and when I’m gone my kids will remember me through the wear and stories. Anybody that thinks a modern made quality gun won’t last for 100 years the way prewar guns have is fooling themselves.
That being said, I would love to be able to find and afford an antique, although I’d have some reservations about beating a classic through the woods. But to hold one and imagine the history behind them is a great feeling. I got burned buying a pre64 model 94, and haven’t really had the stomach to try again. But I suppose that could happen with any used gun, not just classics or antiques.
My appreciation for lever guns stems almost entirely from my Dad's interests - I do not own one, have little intention of buying one unless maybe it's a pistol caliber plinker, and would typically rather shoot bolt actions. I get my lever fix when we meet up and I get to help him with load development.
So from that perspective I kinda look at it like this:
1. The biggest leap forward in my enjoyment of hunting was when I switched to stainless and synthetic guns. I had weapon maintenance pounded into me early and have witnessed plenty of old carbon steel and wood guns with serious cancer. When I learned that being out in GOOD hunting weather is what causes that, having a modern gun that allows me to be in the field without the need for a complete tear down and re-lube in my mind is NICE.
2. If they aren't suffering from being old, old guns often "suffer" from being nice - as in too nice to drag through the weeds and use as intended. You can't readily replace what makes them what they are. I really enjoy shooting them at the range, but would far rather bang something plastic against a rock.
3. You mount the optics. . .where, exactly?
4. Having helped Dad tear down and recondition a number of 1800's relics, I've got to say, if I have to wrench on a lever gun, the modern Marlins are a lot less grief to get into.
In favor of the old guns:
1. They didn't have five lawyers and a budget committee involved in the design and production process. As such, they don't have extra safeties that would either require me to remove them or simply not buy the gun at all out of protest.
2. If they made it this far, they were probably made right to begin with.
So I've got this kind of new/old conflict. The lever action as we think of it does not lend itself to modern production methods - that's fine; I'd rather have a milled block of steel anyway. The Uberti repros are probably the best balance of new precision manufacturing and classic features, but since they are intended to be "traditional" guns, they'll rust, rot, be as much of a pain to take apart as the real thing, and won't take a scope without a machine shop backing you up.
So while I prefer handling the old stuff, it's not without it's limitations. The laminate stainless Ruger 77 Gunsite I've been hunting with is enough of a Mauser 98 to please my "old gun" sensibilities, but can handle the real world without pampering. If JM Marlin had made stainless/synthetic, Ballard-rifled, tapped-for-glass, no-button-safety 1895's, I'd probably be a real fan.
I have the Fantastic Henry reproduction in 45LC I shoot the heck outta this thing it’s an absolute joy to shoot and have fun plinking with.