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Joined: Feb 2013
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Sidelock
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Sidelock

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Does anyone know if it was a common practice in the past with English vintage guns, for gunmakers from small firms to use barrels made and labelled by a different maker? Or would this likely just indicate an instance of replacement barrels after the fact, possibly to change from damascus barrels to fluid steel barrels? Ive seen a couple instances of guns for sale where an action was made by one gunmaker, and the barrels are labelled as made by another. I wouldn't think a gunmaker would brand with someone else's name on the barrels, unless it was a legal thing or marketing ploy. Just curious.

Tim

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If things don't match up, assume the worst. Common-practice or not. If a gun was re-barreled by somebody competent, they generally re-layed the original ribs. Anything else would be suspect.

Last edited by Lloyd3; 04/18/15 01:59 PM.
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I've seen a few instances of guns rebarreled by someone other than the maker recently. I believe there are one or two currently on the Champlin Arms website. In any case, if it's a Damascus gun with replacement steel barrels, if done any time in the last 60 years or so, the proofmarks will show them to be replacement no matter the name on the rib. If they're properly done and by a well-known maker, and if we're talking a gun other than a "best", I don't know that it would bother me all that much.

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Pretty common for replacement barrels. I've got a Lang 16 ga SLE, a nice gun but by no means a 'Best gun' and the replacement barrels were made by Gallyon & Sons. When I shoot a Grouse with it, the bird doesn't know the difference.


Socialism is almost the worst.
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Sidelock
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Thanks guys. Yes, the proof marking and serial # (?) should indicate if the barrels were replacement compared against the action. I was thinking vintage guns pre-WWII, and not best guns. I have only one English Birmingham trade shotgun which is pre-1921 and it has no marking whatsoever on the action to indicate the maker, only the barrel rib indicates the gunmaker. I think I read somewhere that within the early English gun trade, it was common that smaller gunmaking firms would purchase components, barrels and actions from the bigger firms then just fit them together as their own guns; just wasnt sure about the labelling/branding part.

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Tim, not to be pedantic, but I'm not sure you are aware of the "makers to the trade." They specialized in parts, all parts. A brand name maker could buy anything from a pin (screw) to a finished gun with his name on it. Some are little known and some, Webley and Scott, for instance, are quite well known. For the right money, one could have anything from a colonial grade BLNE to a best SLE with one's name on it. I think it rather unusual, although not unheard of, for a name maker to sell parts or a finished gun to a rival. Of course, some makers made a pretty penny off sale of patent use.

I expect you could find several examples of any scenario of "mismatch" you could dream up. Good barrels were valuable and always in demand. Far better to judge the quality of the parts and the integrity of the whole rather than the "righteousness" of the match-up.

DDA

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Some British auctions would call a gun "spuriously marked" if it's new barrels were using the same ribs, but barrels by "another". I have a fine 1896 Jeffery sidelock, beautifully engraved and a fine shooter with new barrels from the 50s by Bland and so marked.

Last edited by Daryl Hallquist; 04/18/15 10:14 PM.
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Sidelock
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Yeah, I just thought it was really interesting. Im not arguing that its improper because its not original, if its up front, nobody is being deceived. Heck, I would buy a Birmingham lesser trade gun with new barrels made and branded by Westley Richards; its about the best that I would ever be able to afford. Thats what I was wondering, if say a Birmingham gunmaker back then could buy a set of barrels from say Frederick Beesley, branded as such, and put it on his named action and legally sell it. I mean that could be a good marketing ploy if youre an unknown small maker. It would be something like branding the Frederick Beesley from Purdeys; akin to riding along on someones reputation. I get the replacement barrel thing, if the original gunmaker is no longer in business you have to get new barrels from somewhere.

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One of the interesting things to me about these early "Trade Guns" is how the engraving on the bottom of the lugs often doesn't seem to match the rest of the engraving on the gun. Anyone have any thoughts on the reason? I'm referring to guns with matching numbers, so I'm guessing it was a normal practice, with the bottom lug being engraved by the barrel-maker, possibly in a standard pattern.


Picture 15 is an example, although is this particular case there is some scrollwork on the lugs. Often, it appears there is only diagonal cross-hatching, not really matching the rest of the scroll-work on the reciever.

http://www.gunbroker.com/Auction/ViewItem.aspx?Item=478790500

Regards,

Ken

Last edited by Ken61; 04/19/15 08:02 AM.

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Some barrels are remarked when work is carried out, on guns converted from muzzle loaders to breach loaders sometimes the names on the locks will show the original maker and the barrels will read

" converted by (then the smiths name) "

When guns are rebarreled sometimes they read

" replacement barrels by ( then the smiths name ) "

The same is occasionally done when guns are sleeved, if its not showing evidence of work ie the barrels just say "Westley Richards" and the action says something different i would assume its something that's been cobbled together.

In the former circumstance where the engraving is evidence of a guns history i'm rather partial to them.

The engraving on this gun tells the guns whole story - started in 1835 as a muzzle loader, then converted, and then re done as a presentation piece with solid silver furniture in 1882, then has been nitro proofed and survived that.




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