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Joined: Jan 2002
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ed good Offline OP
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trojan, vulcan, special, titanic, etc...

are they really different formulations or are they pretty much all the same material, fabricated from the same bar stock?

Last edited by ed good; 02/07/21 10:40 AM.

keep it simple and keep it safe...
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same question re lc smith and their various brands of fluid steel barrels...


keep it simple and keep it safe...
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Tell you what, Eddie- I'll betcha some RST 12 gauge hulls that if you were to spark test the Trojan, Vulcan, Titanic, Acme and Peerless barrels from Parkers over the years up to, let's just say 1934 and the move from Meriden to Ilion N.Y. you'd find them to be identical in composition-my guess 1120-FWIW Foxie


"The field is the touchstone of the man"..
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This has been discussed, researched, and studied over on the PGCA website with some interesting results. As I recall, there are some differences in different steel markings, but not anything that would make one good and the other bad.

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There were clearly several different competing formulas around pre-WW1. But my running thesis is that basically U.S. makers, after licensing from Krupp, basically just altered it a bit and ran with it...unattributed. Spoils of war.

No tears for Krupp, though. Now...Paul Mauser...cry away.

NDG

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It has been well established that the vast majority of fluid steel 'rough forged tubes' used by U.S. double gun makers were sourced in Belgium
Winchester contracted with domestic steel makers, including Bethlehem Steel Co., and Remington (and likely J. Stevens) did produce their own decarbonized and fluid steel barrels.

Testimony by M.C. Mason of Hopkins & Allen stating that J. Stevens Arms & Tool Co. manufactured barrels domestically
https://books.google.com/books?id=seIRAAAAIAAJ&pg=PA629&lpg

In American Rifleman Nov. 1937, A.P Curtis stated in “Making Double Shotgun Barrels” that the American Gun Barrel Company of New Haven, Conn. made barrels for the U.S. market 1914-1921, but it could not compete with the duty free importation of tubes after Belgium recovered from WWI.

The cut and paste research is all here
https://docs.google.com/document/pub?id=17ixogftgITEblNUWtmFBv96ZvgjK6eFell8GsAWd-KI

And the composition analysis of fluid steel barrels, including Dave Suponski's and other's Parker studies is here
https://docs.google.com/document/d/1dnRLZgcuHfx7uFOHvHCUGnGFiLiset-DTTEK8OtPYVA/edit

Summary
1. Unknown date of manufacture Pieper Eclipse, likely Cockerill fluid steel - Non-standard AISI 1030 carbon steel with high manganese & phosphorus.
2. 1898 Hunter Arms “Armor Steel” - Non-standard AISI 1045 carbon steel with high phosphorus and sulfur.
3. 1908 Hunter Arms “Armor Steel” - Non-standard AISI 1018 carbon steel with slightly high phosphorus & sulphur, and a low concentration of nickel.
4. c. 1900 Crescent “Wilson’s Welded Steel” - Non-standard Bessemer (high phosphorus) AISI 1017 low alloy low carbon steel.
5. c. 1910 Meriden Fire Arms “Armory Steel” - Non-standard Bessemer (high phosphorus) AISI 1211/1016 low alloy low carbon steel.
6. A pre - WWI Parker “Titanic” barrel (courtesy of Dave Suponski) - AISI 1030 with low concentrations of nickel and chromium.
7. A pre - WWI Parker “Trojan” barrel (courtesy of Dave Suponski) - AISI 1035.
8. A pre - WWI Parker “Vulcan” (courtesy of Ron Graham) - AISI 1015.
9. A c. 1912 Lefever Arms Co. DS “Dura Nitro Steel” - AISI 1035
10. A post-WWI Parker “Vulcan” barrel (courtesy of Dave Suponski) was AISI 1030.
11. Post-WWI “Parker Steel” was non-standard Acid Bessemer Resulphurized Rephosphorized AISI 1109 low carbon Steel.
12. A c. 1925 Crescent Fire Arms “Genuine Armory Steel” barrel with the ‘LLH’ mark of of Laurent Lochet-Habran showed it to be non-standard (high phosphorus) AISI 1040 Steel.
13. A c. 1929 “Sterlingworth Fluid Compressed Steel” was AISI 1040. Sterlingworth barrels have been found with the three-lobed crown over ‘D’ mark of Jean-Baptiste Delcour-Dupont/Canons Delcour S.A. of Nessonvaux.

Plans & Specifications of the L.C. Smith Shotgun by William S. Brophy contains an undated but likely post-1913 Materials Specification chart indicating “AISI 1020 Carbon Steel” for both the frame and barrel.
However, under the Featherweight drawings dated Feb. 19, 1929 the lug specifies a forging of 1020 steel, but the barrel is “Steel App. 40 Carbon”, likely AISI 1040.

I've got another Smith Armor barrel to test, and may have a blown Crown steel barrel coming also. Still looking for a Nitro steel specimen.

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Drew,

I dont own any post-WW1 doubles. So I have no practical basis for comparison amongst sxs, as my latest sxs chronologically (which is a Krupp gun) dates from about 1905. After that, you jump all the way to 1960's Wingmasters.

I do however own lever and bolt rifles from the late 1920's through the 50's. Not a single one has any mark other than those stamped by Winchester, Remington, Marlin, etc.

So i guess I would wonder...was the sourcing of shotgun tubes more foreign focused than for rifled barrels? Becuase as stated, some of these are FINE rifles, and some of them are boys 22s...and none are marked other than their Yankee maker.

Clearly rifling of barrels was expensive and required precision machining. But the steel itself could still have been foreign sourced. And if it really was so cheap domestic suupliers couldnt compete...why no foreign marks on any of my guns from the 1920's onward?

I'm not arguing...Im inquiring.

NDG

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Drewbie-- The Late Gun Writer. author (Guns and Gunning- 1934 as well as Field & Stream's gun editor back in that era pre-WW2- was Paul A. Curtis. I am lucky to have a signed copy of his first ed. that book, and my Nash Buckingham books (all 1st ed.s.--) are the touchstones of my gunning library. So, dare I ask, whom is, or was, this A.P. chap? Gracias-- El Zorro

Last edited by Run With The Fox; 02/08/21 03:53 PM. Reason: A.P. or Paul A. Curtis??

"The field is the touchstone of the man"..
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Bro. Nudge: I know next to nothing about rifle barrels. There is some information at the bottom of the link

For those interested, this is what an analysis and tensile testing report looks like; the M12 Winchester Nickel Steel barrel

[Linked Image from photos.smugmug.com]

A.P. Curtis

[Linked Image from photos.smugmug.com]

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Originally Posted by Drew Hause
Bro. Nudge: I know next to nothing about rifle barrels.

A barrel is typically a deep hole with steel wrapped around it. A rifle barrel has some spiral grooves to impart spin to the projectile to stabilize it.

Your copy-and-paste research confirms that barrel makers used a lot of different steels to make perfectly usable shotgun barrels. They range from low carbon 1015 to much higher carbon 1045. And there was wide variation in composition, even in barrels used by the same manufacturers, over time. That kind of confirms my statements saying that your very small sampling and metallurgical testing tells us very little at all.

But I suppose it looks impressive to those who know nothing about steel, and next to nothing about rifle barrels.


A true sign of mental illness is any gun owner who would vote for an Anti-Gunner like Joe Biden.

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