Just An Old Winchester Single Shot...Don't Even Bother Looking

nw mb

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I'll post this here as I can't send you a pic on PM without going through gyrations.

I bought this old Winchester single in 1992. It was a wreck. The bore was clean but the outside of the barrel was pitted and the stock looked like it had been put through a meat grinder. I was looking for a 'throw-away' gun that I could use on the ocean for eiders. Even without contact with salt water my better guns came back with a glaze of rust on them which horrified me. So I bought this for $40. I phoned Winchester from the store itself and spoke with one of their engineers who stated that the gun itself was strong enough for steel but recommended that a screw-in choke be installed with an external choke tube. So that's the first thing I did. At the time it was $50 to have it tapped. The first time I went out I was laughed at by the others. But the gun is light, extremely well-balanced, and swings beautifully. That morning I never missed and even managed to get a double on a long line of birds coming in...I shot the lead duck and then dropped the last one going out...there were no more jokes after that! :) (I was lucky.) A year later a friend was bluing some guns and I snuck the barrel in for a $40 bluing job. Then I stripped the birch stock, stained it black and painted a camo pattern on it to match the rock outcrops we'd hunted off of and varnished it. I added a sling and shell holder a year or two after that along with a recoil pad. I used to keep the receiver just bare metal, but finally painted it a flat black. And there you have it. I still take it out for waterfowl and actually like the old girl very much. I've become more and more classic in my thinking when it comes to guns, was given a Marlin 55 Goose Gun in 12 ga. last fall, did a total make over with it, installed my own tubes and can't wait to get out with it in September. I did buy a Chiappa Little Badger a month ago just for convenience but hope to never buy another new gun the rest of my life...there's just too many good old ones out there...and I like to fiddle with them during winters up here. I do my own chokes by hand because it saves me money in the end, but is not for the faint of heart...the reamer/tap were expensive...it takes me a full day to ream and tap and my hand is sore by the end...and my Marlin 55 had a barrel too long to put on someone's lathe anyway unless they cut the barrel way back, which I consider akin to a sin! Good luck with yours...

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Next time you have a hankering to do the choke modification, don't forget your camera and a one, two, three step photo?

Thanks for the story.
 
Interesting restoration....a firearm will usually far outlast its owner if given min. care . Sometimes we , myself included , get carried away in needing the newest and best firearms out there . But I often think of my Grandfather who had eight children , and used the same three guns , and whatever ammo that the local store carried , to put meat on the table for himself and his family . He had an old 12 g. break action single , a Win. 30-30 , and a Win 32 special . He used the same three firearms for everything including Moose , bear , deer , ducks , quail , partridge , etc ; and never gave it a second thought....all with iron sights.....I often think about how much more resourceful they were then , than people are now......
 
...I told you guys not to look! ;)

1. I can post a choke installation...I have pics from my last install. Just realize that it is not without its dangers. Every time I work on a gun I am very careful to not exceed the limits of my skill...I am NOT a professional gunsmith. And when it comes to things that affect the chamber, etc. I leave that to someone else. I have had a lot of success...I think that my patience has grown with my age, so it may take me a very long time to feel comfortable with preparations before I begin. Things like a poorly fitting pilot will ramp up your chance for failure. And yes, I actually ruined a new 12 ga. slug gun some years ago trying a mod on it. Best to work on cheaper, older guns and ease into the water!

2. ...thanks, I rather take some pride in this gun, although in the end it probably cost me $150 overall...but I like knowing I can do my own work. Nowadays up here I either have to do it myself or send it off, which I don't like to do.

3. I have a pic of my dad's 17 year old cousin kneeling in front of 6 whitetail bucks he shot on 6 consecutive days to help feed his family...it was illegal what he did but they were resourceful...they lived way back in the bush...he used that 35 Remington for 30 years and went to a 30-06 later in life just because ammo was more available. I will try and post it some day if I can find it. I have totally changed in 40 years of hunting...with the internet now you can buy from TradeEx a BSA 30-06 or 9mm for a few hundred bucks with an excellent bore. What a classy dame! When I was young I wanted stuff yesterday! Now I don't see things that way...
 
I heard an expression at the last gun show by a feller whom stood on our side of the table for a visit.
Something along the lines as..............
"I bought a beat up 22 for $150. Spent a bunch of hours on it and put $?? into it. Sold it for $140.
My reply was, "sounds like me, pay too much, fix the farking thing and take a beating on it".
"No son, I did really well on this one. Cheaper than playing golf and less frustrating. Good therapy
fixing guns, so a ten or so dollar loss is really cheap cheap therapy".

Something along that train of thought. If he's on here, maybe give us a better s'plane'n.
 
I heard an expression at the last gun show by a feller whom stood on our side of the table for a visit.
Something along the lines as..............
"I bought a beat up 22 for $150. Spent a bunch of hours on it and put $?? into it. Sold it for $140.
My reply was, "sounds like me, pay too much, fix the farking thing and take a beating on it".
"No son, I did really well on this one. Cheaper than playing golf and less frustrating. Good therapy
fixing guns, so a ten or so dollar loss is really cheap cheap therapy".

Something along that train of thought. If he's on here, maybe give us a better s'plane'n.

100% on why we do what we do!

I read a quote by Kipling many years ago: There's something about loving a woman with a broken nose, you may find others that are more beautiful, but you will never find one more real...

amen....amen...
 
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