I may not be as hard core as GooseMaster but be careful, if you shoot one, you may find its as special as he says.I always hear people say these old classic brownings are the best. I'm gonna see if a grandpa at the gun club will let me shoot a round with theirs. View attachment 12530
Yes sir thank you!Look at this old box I found from a Belgian browning. It looks like your dog River.
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So, what you are telling me... This is a really good set of graphics, thanks for sharing.One of these loads is a stone cold pheasant killing wonder.
The other load is best used on dove and woodcock only.
Can you guess which is which?
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1952 to 1958 a5I may not be as hard core as GooseMaster but be careful, if you shoot one, you may find its as special as he says.
Your dad was a hack.Those old Browning guns are the best.I totally disagree with you.Those old brownings were all the range back in the day. My dad had a 12 and a 16. As I recall they were heavy, clunky, temperamental. They were designed to run paper shells. You had to keep them clean and oiled. If you're a lefty no joy. The safeties were sticky and would bite your finger. I remember my dad throwing his in the ditch more than once, like he did with his old Walter Hagan wood shaft golf clubs. John Browning was a master at gun design. The 50 deuce went a long way to helping us win WW2. I wonder what he would have given us had he lived another generation. Those guns were made 70 years ago.. A lot has changed design , materials, manufacturing technique. Our modern guns are lighter, reliable, shoot modern ammo. There is no way those old antiques are better than what we have today. They were great guns and deserve a place in history. Take one off the shelf once in a while and shoot it in honour of someone that came before us. You will never convince me they are better than the choices we have today. That's like saying a 63 corvette is better than my 23 C-8. It may be as or more valuable but run them on track or strip and the 63 will be left in the dust. Now you want to talk doubles. Those old Parker, Fox, LC smith, those were some fine guns.
Hoping this is tounge and cheek. The sweet 16 of old is as light as many today. Handles and shoots just as well. My light 12 handles and shoots just as good as my A400, if not better. Prettier to boot.Those old brownings were all the range back in the day. My dad had a 12 and a 16. As I recall they were heavy, clunky, temperamental. They were designed to run paper shells. You had to keep them clean and oiled. If you're a lefty no joy. The safeties were sticky and would bite your finger. I remember my dad throwing his in the ditch more than once, like he did with his old Walter Hagan wood shaft golf clubs. John Browning was a master at gun design. The 50 deuce went a long way to helping us win WW2. I wonder what he would have given us had he lived another generation. Those guns were made 70 years ago.. A lot has changed design , materials, manufacturing technique. Our modern guns are lighter, reliable, shoot modern ammo. There is no way those old antiques are better than what we have today. They were great guns and deserve a place in history. Take one off the shelf once in a while and shoot it in honour of someone that came before us. You will never convince me they are better than the choices we have today. That's like saying a 63 corvette is better than my 23 C-8. It may be as or more valuable but run them on track or strip and the 63 will be left in the dust. Now you want to talk doubles. Those old Parker, Fox, LC smith, those were some fine guns.
you're not wrong but for the sake of the 28 I can't switch up lolDude, you're 20, you're going to have several guns in every gauge!!![]()
Have been thinking about a SxS, might have to give the Orion a try! Honestly, recoil of the 555 doesn't bother me one bit, but I'm also young and haven't shot much else outside of it for 28 gauge to compare.I used to shoot a Stevens 555 28 ga. it had a lot of recoil compared to my Weatherby Orion SxS 28ga and Benelli Ultralight 28ga. I do shoot a .410 Stevens 555 Sporting and I love it!