First series Model 900 Ithaca. Single extractor and unsplit ejector are the indicators. I have the second version with setters and pheasants very nice handling gun and reliable. "Custom Crafted in Japan by SKB for Ithaca Gun Company" mine reads. Mine also has the Dunnville Ontario address for Ithaca. As for value I paid 300.00 for mine in extremely excellent condition.
Darryl
I had the XL900. Paid $325.00 for it brand new in 1977. Nice handling gun but mine was not reliable at all no matter how well it was cleaned.
That style of recoil system requires the friction pieces to be set correctly for the power of the shell and if failure to eject is a problem the magazine tube usually requires light lubrication, not left dry. I use a light grease for this on all of the old 'Auto 5' recoil systems.
It depends on the gun. Some guns need to have slight lubrication to function. Others can function without lube.
Hi guntech. I also had a "reverse total shoulder arthroplasty" in Jan. And still recovering. Thought I'd sight in a Ruger #1 25 06 yesterday and should have waited another month or two. This thing takes a while to get over. Good luck.
I agree... if the friction pieces are set correctly and the tube dry and the gun functions fine... that's desirable...
but over 45 years I have encountered numerous Browning Auto 5's that with the friction pieces set correctly and the tube dry would have ejection failures every time... and that was easily corrected with lubricating the tube. Successful ejection is based on the barrel slamming forward quickly. Sometimes a dry tube does not allow that.
The wrist is freshly pinned and glass bedded...I just did it... it looks like the stock bolt was not tight and possibly it had been fallen on or it was a natural 'check' in the wood over time.
Long recoil guns are funny in that adding too much lube can also cause a failure to cycle. The lubrication can cause the barrel to cycle too quickly and not give the system enough time to eject a spent shell. The result can be a spent shell getting rechambered, getting hung up in the receiver between the bolt and the barrel, or getting caught on the next shell floating on the follower. If a mag needs lube for the gun to cycle, that means the friction ring is too tight on the mag tube. A better fix is some steel wool to the inside of the brass ring and a very slight polish to the mag tube for 1/2 to 5/8 of where the ring travels furtherest from the receiver
No doubt a lubricant will help, but more often then not, its a solution rather than an actual fix. I own many long recoil guns and have only had to resort to lube once. There has been an actual fix every other time. If many different manufactures (Browning, Franchi, Remington, Breda, SKB) say no lube, there is usually a reason for it.



























