14" Norinco 780 Homeland Security 12ga, possible sale

I have one of these and about the only thing I'm disappointed with is the odd sized receiver. The main pins are located in the right spots (for a while I had a 870 side saddle on mine) but the receiver overall is an odd duck. Not too sure what it's supposed to be copied from. The firing pin went tits up early, but a Remington one fit in no probs.
If you want a half-assed beater gun, these will fit the bill. Crank off some rounds then use it as a jack handle, paddle a canoe or check out your javelin skills.

(E) :cool:
 
Ok so I tried the great search function and could not come up with anything useful.
So I will ask here,
Are these guns really that bad and why? Is it just fit and finish or is it function?
Thanks
Eric
 
They will be on the website later this week. I want to wait until I have a picture of one to put them online.
 
Does anyone have a good picture of one? They are supposed to be here this week and I was going to put them on the website today.

Ryan
 
HP9 14" Norinco pumps with a five year warranty and a proven fielding pounding and still ticking are already available. (from us)

It would seem logical to spend more money on something that is proven to work and warrantied rather than spending money on something advertised sold "as is" and may immediately require parts replacements or teching.

We are talking "firearms" here, right?
 
Try google , if I bought one and put a pistol grip on it would that make it restricted ?

The HP9 14" is 32" OAL, so as long as your pistol grip only reduced the limit 6", you're good to go. Assemble your pistol grip, measure from the farthest point to the linear point of where your barrel ends, and if it's more than 26" you're good to go. You may also need a straight piece of wood for example pointing vertically to line up the points after you're measuring across the shotgun, or draw it on a table.
 
HP9 14" Norinco pumps with a five year warranty and a proven fielding pounding and still ticking are already available. (from us)

It would seem logical to spend more money on something that is proven to work and warrantied rather than spending money on something advertised sold "as is" and may immediately require parts replacements or teching.

We are talking "firearms" here, right?

Hijacking another dealer's thread... :rolleyes: classy... Another reason to not do business with you.
 
Hijacking another dealer's thread... :rolleyes: classy... Another reason to not do business with you.

I don't see any hijacking here. I'm talking about the same thing the OP is talking about. If it will make you feel better, we're not the only dealer in Canada and on CGN selling these shotguns.

If people such as yourself are going to threaten boycott of my business because I choose to point out the blinding obvious concern of buying a firearm that has no warranty and is sold as is, I take that as a compliment and say "thank you." If you wish to purchase and use a firearm that is advertised as such, that's as much as your privilege as me pointing out the folly of doing so. We can agree to disagree. If that extra $160.00 you're going to save is worth it to you, you should go ahead and buy one.
 
ki11ercane: I'm not threatening to boycott your business.. lol. I decided you weren't someone that I wanted to do business with a long time ago... way back when you started advertising your "Tactical S.E.A.L. Knife" for a penny... ;) So no veiled threats of a boycott there... :D

What I'm talking about is simple etiquette. But if I have to explain that to you at this point in the game, you probably wouldn't see it from this perspective anyway. So sure, let's agree to disagree... and neither of us will loose any sleep over it.

Cheers.
 
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