Ithaca 37 Project 1/2 (Pic Heavy)

Grendeb

Regular
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Location
Quebec
Hi,

I thought I'd share my experience with my last little project, some things worked some didn't.
I've been wanting an Ithaca 37 for quite a while and thanks to a fellow CGN I was able to buy one in the condition and price I wanted.

New Ithacas are available but quite pricey, I wanted a model similar to this:
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No engraving, corn grip style, short barrel.
What I bought:
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The receiver had some rust but overall everything was in good condition for this project.
Videos on youtube are helpful up to a point, nobody shows how to disassemble the trigger group so it was fun to figure that out.
9NI8CKw.jpg

Good time to clean everything else.
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Sanding:
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Barrel Cut to 18.5":
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I wanted to remove the engraving and rusts spots but haven't found much useful mostly people doing engraving or removing by sanding jewels but I was skeptical of removing material on a firearm so I tried filling it with steel weld epoxy...didn't work so I sanded all of that to the minimum which in the end is very minimal.
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Engraving and rust spots:
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All parts primed and painted with engine enamel, we'll see how it hold up.
Baked in an oven for 1h at 250F.
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Reassembly, let the game begins
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Final
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Now I'll find how to do the wood (sanding or chemical to remove find the various oils) I like the forehand but the buttstock would need some love.

Cheers!
 
How did you strip the finish on the gun?
Wire wheel and sanding?

I did a similar project on a destroyed 1914 model 12 pump
I rebuilt the bolt and some of the trigger and screws for about 40 bucks from numrich
Cut the dented barrel back to 20" glued and refinished the stock sets.
I used engine block paint on mine too. Flat black with a primer and baked in the oven.
It turned out amazing and the thing will cycle shells for another 100 years.
It was a fun project. I paid 100 bucks for the shotgun and now it's good as new.
 
Last edited:
How did you strip the finish on the gun?
Wire wheel and sanding?

You are correct, I used wire wheel and hand sanding for the hard to get places.
Wire wheel gets the job done so quick and gets into the cracks much better than with a brush or sand paper.
For the receiver I used a grinder with 80 sand paper used for paint and removed slowly until i didn't see the engraving or rust.

Good to heat for your gun!
How is the engine enamel holding up?
 
I have an original 1966 with a 20” full choke, looks a lot like yours, fun guns and lightweight.
 
You are correct, I used wire wheel and hand sanding for the hard to get places.
Wire wheel gets the job done so quick and gets into the cracks much better than with a brush or sand paper.
For the receiver I used a grinder with 80 sand paper used for paint and removed slowly until i didn't see the engraving or rust.

Good to heat for your gun!
How is the engine enamel holding up?

So far it's invincible
I don't baby my guns either. All of the few I own get rode hard, used frequently and handled rough lol
Its an excellent cheap finish and it looks awesome.
Attention to detail and a lot of brake clean to degrease it was the most important part.
 
Awesome looking, I’ll have to keep my eyes peeled for a beater to refinish as I’ve always loved the older m37’s. I would think a 18.5”-20” barrel would be pretty perfect, would have to get it threaded for chokes as well.
 
what is a " corn style grip"?

the forehand style.
You might have noticed variations in forends either on pump or over/under, they all have name; classic, police, corn cob, light contour, M-lok...
Mine is the early designs that came on the firsts pump shotguns as far as I know and wanted this style over the classic upland styles.
 
How's the paint holding up after a couple months? I jmagine you can't beat it around as much as if it were blued because of potential chips or scratches to the paint.
 
How's the paint holding up after a couple months? I jmagine you can't beat it around as much as if it were blued because of potential chips or scratches to the paint.

Sorry for the delay,
Truth be told I haven't shot it yet it's staying in my safe haha I'm considering of selling it to move on another project.
 
"How's the paint holding up after a couple months? I jmagine you can't beat it around as much as if it were blued because of potential chips or scratches to the paint..."

Bought an orphan 37 decades ago for $5, put a stock on it [actually many over the years], cleaned and
painted it and carried it in a zillion 4x4s, used it lots and probably repainted it 5-6 times over the years.
Never let me down until forest service destroyed it. Handiest pump shotgun to use, just like the other
John Browning guns. A Rem 870 is a total clunkster in comparison. Don't sweat the paint.
 
Iv'e got an early smoothbore deerslayer12ga that clover leafs Brenneke slugs at 50 yards and a 20ga 28" FC I relax pheasants with.
 
Iv'e got an early smoothbore deerslayer12ga that clover leafs Brenneke slugs at 50 yards and a 20ga 28" FC I relax pheasants with.

I have a police deerslayer circa 1990. Using one Brenneke I took a wild boar at 70 yards using its iron sights. I have a 20 gauge seen lots of small game hunts and two years ago purchased the newest 28. Superb upland shotguns.
 
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