Jan Powell
Well-known member
- Joined
- Mar 22, 2012
- Messages
- 1,736
Including Mrs P’s guns, 3 shotguns. Two Krieghoff and one Beretta. Also a selection of bolt action and semi automatic rifles as well as a 1911 pistol.
How do you like your 1187? I have an 1187 Premier Trap which is my go to trap gun (I guess it's not really a beater). To be honest, it is a little cumbersome for ATA trap shooting. But it works, and it's what I have.4 a Beretta 682 gold e which I've used for 13 year's clay shooting. A zabala sxs which I use for the odd sxs competition. A Remington 1187 which I use for vermin shooting around the farm. And a 1984 Beretta 682 trap X which I bought on a whim and it was the best thing I've done, it's 3/4 and full none selective trigger I now use it for all my clay shooting and I've never shot so well.
Curious, how does a gun perish to underuse? Shame for any gun, an EELL perhaps more so..my wife’s Beretta 687 EELL which may have perished due to underuse.
it was a humorous remark..Curious, how does a gun perish to underuse? Shame for any gun, an EELL perhaps more so..
Altho I've not come across any Perazzi forends that meet that standard I favor the schnable style anyway and they are quite light. the one non-schnable is a '72 standard trap and I don't notice that it is any heavier. With the machining facilities you have available how can anything not be made lighter? :huh:3 for me. The Perazzi I used for years (which I would still use if a Perazzi forend weighed less than a house brick), the Blaser I have used since October 2016 and my wife’s Beretta 687 EELL which may have perished due to underuse.
It's a 28" 1187 sporting with the light contour barrel. Lovely gun but it does need regular maintenance. Something normally breaks every couple of months.How do you like your 1187? I have an 1187 Premier Trap which is my go to trap gun (I guess it's not really a beater). To be honest, it is a little cumbersome for ATA trap shooting. But it works, and it's what I have.
Really looked at it, but the huge metal percentage is just a barrier. The Blaser forend has the same metal content as a gold plated toothpick.Altho I've not come across any Perazzi forends that meet that standard I favor the schnable style anyway and they are quite light. the one non-schnable is a '72 standard trap and I don't notice that it is any heavier. With the machining facilities you have available how can anything not be made lighter? :huh:
I can see a mill reducing that by about 1/3 or more in a few minutes. Somehow I just am unable to see the forend weight as a factor with the weight being nearly between the hands and counting for a meager % of the overall gun weight but I'm not trying to swing some porky barrel either.Really looked at it, but the huge metal percentage is just a barrier.
The plod are very careful about domestic considerations when it comes to granting shotgun licenses; Also state of mind and whether or not the applicant takes a drink or two, though how the apply these considerations is mystifying at times. True story and quite funny. A guy that used to be with our syndicate tried to work a fast one on his employer and pulled the stress card. He was signed off work for many many months and being in his later years his employers suggested he take early retirement on health grounds as they really needed someone doing his work. Fine says he, thinking of a life of carefree days out on the shoot and getting an early pension to boot... plod came round to his house and took his guns away I think someone at the firm grassed him up because he had been off for ages prior to that with no problems@ColinD
Isn’t just a little bit ironic that any criminal worth their salt is hardly likely to bother with complying with the law would go to the trouble to file for a SGC
The issue, I have no qualms disclosing as it’s a simple fact of life, my ex wife and I had over the years a tempestuous relationship. Six of one half a dozen of the other to be fair. The volume of our many disagreements over the course of a decade did on a couple of occasions attract the attention of joe Public and subsequently a visit from a local PC.
Their main concern was raised when I was asked if I thought my ex would male spurious claims about my waving a shotgun around and given the volatility in the past and wanting to answer honesty, I had to say that I couldn’t rule that possibility out, this further checks about the ex and the children had to take place.
The ensuing staffing issues and subsequently Covid just added immensely to the delay.
to give the FO credit, he did say give the time interval my application would [once the backlog of renewals are cleared] be top of the pile.
I would have said exactly the same. I weighed everything in comparison to the Blaser to see how much lighter the barrels were. I was amazed barrels were identical and it was all in the forend and this makes it feels massively different to handle.I can see a mill reducing that by about 1/3 or more in a few minutes. Somehow I just am unable to see the forend weight as a factor with the weight being nearly between the hands and counting for a meager % of the overall gun weight but I'm not trying to swing some porky barrel either.
but that could just be me insensitive clot that I am - as are most Perazzi shooters I presume
Jokes are always better when explained. Ask Schmokinn on page 5 of the Closing the gun thread. :meeting:it was a humorous remark..
Indeed... Given that all valuable gifts I've presented to mrs. Luke have mostly gone missing, were broken, or have otherwise ' perished', I suppose I related without seeing the humour. Somehow the odds of unfortunate events seem to increase with the initial expense, but thats just my luck (or hers). In any case I'm usually not shy of ideas for what to replace for her birthday.it was a humorous remark..
Given the behaviour of some SGC holders I have witnessed, one thinks that “The Plod” may sometimes being not careful enough!The plod are very careful about domestic considerations when it comes to granting shotgun licenses; Also state of mind and whether or not the applicant takes a drink or two, though how the apply these considerations is mystifying at times. True story and quite funny. A guy that used to be with our syndicate tried to work a fast one on his employer and pulled the stress card. He was signed off work for many many months and being in his later years his employers suggested he take early retirement on health grounds as they really needed someone doing his work. Fine says he, thinking of a life of carefree days out on the shoot and getting an early pension to boot... plod came round to his house and took his guns away I think someone at the firm grassed him up because he had been off for ages prior to that with no problems
Oh so true !Given the behaviour of some SGC holders I have witnessed, one thinks that “The Plod” may sometimes being not careful enough!
Aside from a small crack in the forend that has been there for as long as I've had it, mine has been holding up pretty well. But, I don't get out and shoot it nearly as much as I should.It's a 28" 1187 sporting with the light contour barrel. Lovely gun but it does need regular maintenance. Something normally breaks every couple of months.
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