GUN HERE WITH ME MY SON SAYS ITS IN GOOD SHAPE COULD YOU GIVE ME A IDEA WHAT ITS WORTH
Sport & Outdoor – Others
Or I would take to a good gun dealer and have them appraise it for you.
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All 12 gauge shells for shooting competition trap fit a 2 ¾ inch chamber. That doesn`t mean you have to use 2 ¾ inch shells, but if you don`t you are going to feel a little lonesome. But nothing is simple. If you measure a trap shell you will find that it is a little less than 2 1/2 inches long.
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Mar 12, 2010 – I have a 3/4hp flotec convertible jet pump. It is able to hold 30lbs pressure on the discharge side as the primie easily for 24 hours. It is not able to pull water from the well whcih has been here for years. i disconnected it for the winter and rehooked it up. The galvanized couplers on the discharge and pump side are old but do not appear to be leakeing as I taped them well. The check valve seems to be functioning well as I took it off and the flap works correctly. The well is not pulling watrer. there does not appear to be a vacuum on the check vale when I losen it. could the check valve be bad? I am aware I might have to resleeve the well, but do not want to hassle with this if I do not have to. I want to eliminate everything else first. i put another brand new pump on it to see if it was that. That partiuclar pump which was the same thng did not work either.
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Goof Luck.
There is a pin at the top of the of the barrel. What is it;s function and how do I lock the two pieces in place when I prepare to load?
Thanks, We hunted with this gun when I was small and I want my son to learn to use the gun
Doug
From Wikipedia info:The Model 12 (introduced in 1912) was the next step from the Winchester Model 1897 hammer-fired shotgun, which in turn had evolved from the earlier Winchester Model 1893 shotgun. The Model 12 was designed by Winchester employee Thomas Crossly Johnson, and was based in large part on a design by John Browning. It was an entirely new hammerless design and was initially available in 20 gauge only (12 and 16 gauge guns were not sold until 1914). The Model 12 was the first truly successful modern hammerless pump-action shotgun ever produced. Its tubular magazine was loaded, and the action was fed, through the bottom of the gun. Empty shotgun shells ejected to the right. Depending on the particular wooden transformer plug installed in the magazine, 2, 3, or 4 shells could be stored in the tubular magazine. Without a plug, the magazine will hold 6, 2 3/4″ 12 ga. shells. With its forged and polished steel parts, the ultimate reason for the end of its regular production in 1963 was that it had become too expensive to produce at a competitive price. The primary competition at this time came from the much less expensive Remington Model 870, which had been introduced in 1950. In addition to price competition issues, the Winchester Model 12 rarely had parts break or wear out, often serving multiple subsequent owners, which further served to limit repeat sales. The majority of “modern” Model 12 shotguns manufactured after the 1930’s were chambered for 2¾-inch shotgun shells, only. Some early Model 12’s, however, were chambered for 2 9/16-inch shotgun shells. To add further confusion, some of these early Model 12’s have subsequently been modified, with their chambers lengthened to accept 2¾-inch shotgun shells, while others remain in their factory-stock 2 9/16-inch chamber lengths. Careful inspection by a gunsmith is always recommended to determine whether or not it is safe to fire a modern 2¾-inch shotgun shell in older Model 12’s.Special commemorative examples were nonetheless produced by Winchester after 1963 through 2006, through specialized gun collector purchase programs, but the Perfect Repeater shotgun was never mass-produced after 1963. The Winchester factory announced a complete closing of the factory facility in January 2006, thus ending the Model 12’s long and illustrious career at the age of 95 years.This site is for the R&R of the barrelhttp://www.nrapublications.org/TAR/Winchester12.asp