I'll think about it. My daughter is the digital camera "ace"-I am not-- it is a sweet 12 3E with mint wood- 100% checkering, no cracks or splits anywhere in the buttstock, original 1904 splinter forearm, and the later added small beavertail forearm, with the post 1930 change from the "banjo" escutcheon to the rectangular style-
I have seen several later (post 1926-1939) graded 12 gauge Smiths put up as double trap or possibly live bird shotguns- 12 gauges 30" or 32" barrels- Trap, Specialty, Eagle-- etc-- with factory beavertail forearms- almost all with massive wood at the rear (where the forearm iron "anvil" is- to the heavy Germanic Schnabel at the front-- IMO- not pleasing to the eye- this is a way smaller in cross-section beavertail design, and as the ejector forearm metal is stamped 2, as are the barrel flats, denoting a factory fitted second set of barrels-
I have to assume the beavertail forearm was produced with the set of 32" VR barrels- at FWIWIP-- Mr. Backstrand must have also requested his name C.J. Backstrand also engraved in the same block upper case script on the original 26" Nitro steel barrels , at the factory is my guess- we shall see as this story unfolds--
Last edited by Run With The Fox; 12/16/16 07:34 PM.