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Forums10
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Most Online1,344 Apr 29th, 2024
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Joined: Apr 2002
Posts: 6,812
Sidelock
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Sidelock
Joined: Apr 2002
Posts: 6,812 |
Gun terminology is impressionistic, anthropomorphic, analogic. The entire inny-outy bit of the frame and the mirror image on the iron (as Toby says, Hello Toby) could be called a knuckle because? -----it looks like a knuckle joint in bone. Also looks like a "rule" joint in either a folding rule, or how bout the gate leg of a gate leg table (which is articulated by what could be termed a "piano hinge" in wood) and of course the keybd. cover there names its hinge. You can call it Al; you can call it Sal; when you call it the "detonating", we know from whence you came! Back awhile, someone asked about the little "brush deflector" in a trigger guard. I call it a "quirk" cause I can but S. D. Hughes calls it the "return" (a common enuf term in carpentry, architectural millwork). It's all good as Owleye used to say, but balls ain't fences!
Wait for the next round of "water table" exegesis, Lou. You'll luvit.
jack
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Joined: Jan 2009
Posts: 682
Sidelock
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OP
Sidelock
Joined: Jan 2009
Posts: 682 |
I am looking for a term for the rearmost edge of the forearm iron on one of my guns because it scratches the receiver when the gun is fully open and I want to tell the smith to polish that location
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Joined: Apr 2002
Posts: 6,812
Sidelock
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Sidelock
Joined: Apr 2002
Posts: 6,812 |
I believe that's the bedight in some camps; the tissel in others. Only kidding. I got a word for knife-edged things that get bent and scratch other things and I'll bet you do too. Use that one.
jack
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Joined: Apr 2002
Posts: 6,812
Sidelock
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Sidelock
Joined: Apr 2002
Posts: 6,812 |
Now about that receiver . . .? A term not honoured in the breech, so to speak.
jack
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Joined: Feb 2009
Posts: 104
Sidelock
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Sidelock
Joined: Feb 2009
Posts: 104 |
Bushmaster...
Not that you are not getting good advice here... but David Tervallion and Mike McIntosh wrote a book called "Shotgun Technicana." While it can be difficult to find and sometimes a bit pricey, I think it is EXACTLY what you are looking for... explains in nearly endless detail the differences and function of almost all things double barrel shotguns as well as the history of how each improved on the previous, etc...
(the book can be found for around $50... I would not personally buy the first one that you find for $200)
Andrew
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Joined: Jan 2002
Posts: 5,954 Likes: 12
Sidelock
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Sidelock
Joined: Jan 2002
Posts: 5,954 Likes: 12 |
Contrare to Joe (who is a very good friend), I have no issue with non-rebounding hammers. Usually, IME, they need to be returned to half cock to be opened as the firing pins will block passage of the extractors. Opening before recocking to half cock is a first class way to break a firing pin tip. The one hazzard I see is letting the hammers all the way down on loaded cartridges. Frankly, considering that hammerless guns actually have their hammers cocked all the time, I don't find any versions of hammer guns any less safe. There are a lot of ways to hurt yourself or someone else with any gun.
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Joined: Apr 2002
Posts: 6,812
Sidelock
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Sidelock
Joined: Apr 2002
Posts: 6,812 |
Lou, you didn't take the bait on the receiver gag, so I'll engage in a bit of pedantry and point out what I think is an important distinction between guns which have receivers and those which don't. Most all guns with receivers are self-loaders--machine guns, auto pistols--or self-loaders with an Armstrong assist--lever (with the exception of falling blocks) and turnbolt rifles, pumpguns. All have an antechamber, so to speak, place where the shell or cartridge is introduced right before it's chambered. The introduction of the shell is from your box or tubular magazine or your en bloc clip, belt, drum or whatever via the action of springs and levers and it is never touched in the actual process of chambering. I know there are special cases; at 16 yd trap, I drop a shell in the chamber of a model 12 or an autoloader and bypass both the receiver function as well as the rammer function of the bolt. Used or not, a receiver is a receiver. Break open guns are not operated like a gun with a receiver, don't have a receiver, and what they do have behind the barrels isn't called a receiver except by those of us who grew up with repeater terminology or don't care one way or the other. Frame or action bar are the accepted terms for the chunk of steel behind the barrels of a break action gun.
jack
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Joined: Jan 2002
Posts: 2,522
Sidelock
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Sidelock
Joined: Jan 2002
Posts: 2,522 |
For Joe in Charlotte, you don't happen to have one of those nasty old Fox shotguns with non rebounding hammers do you. I will be happy to take any such 20 or 16 ga off your hands for your safety.
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Joined: Feb 2002
Posts: 331 Likes: 6
Sidelock
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Sidelock
Joined: Feb 2002
Posts: 331 Likes: 6 |
Jerry,
I am not the guy for domestic boxlocks. I only own one American double, a field grade LC Smith that my wife's grandfather bought in the 20s. The rest of my stuff is English at the moment. I do have some non-rebounders, a couple of 14 gauge doubles and some early Boswells.
Joe
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