Any Browning A5 experts out there

stephen492

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Just inherited an FN Browning A5 ser# 466---. It is appears to have some light factory engraving. proof marks 1kg 191, A Pi symbol, a capital B with a star over it, an "ELG" in a crown, and a 12-70 in a C.

I have looked on the browning website and it only shows the serial #'s going to 438000. I was told it dates to 1931 but can not confirm.

Can anyone tell me about this shotgun??
 
Browning A5 shotguns are great guns. quick load by dropping in the shell and pushing the button. I have a number of them and use them for trap shooting etc. The military used the Browning A5 with 8 round tube and extended forend in europe and africa. Is it 3" or 2 3/4?
 
Long history there.

www.shotgunworld.com

Has a Browning owners forum. The A5 is an amazing shotgun. I have a '64.

Designed in 1898 if I remember right and in production in one place or the other for over 80 years.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Browning_Auto-5


The Browning Auto-5 was the first mass-produced semiautomatic shotgun. Designed by John Browning in 1898 and patented in 1900[2], it was produced continually for almost 100 years by several makers with production ending in 1998. It features a distinctive high rear end, earning it the nickname "Humpback". The top of the action goes straight back on a level with the barrel before cutting down sharply towards the buttstock. This distinctive feature makes it easy to identify A-5s from a distance. A-5s were produced in a variety of gauges, with 12- and 20- predominating; 16 gauge (not produced between 1976 and 1987) models were also available.
[edit] Production

John Browning presented his design (which he called his best achievement)[3] to Winchester, where he had sold most of his previous designs. When Winchester refused his terms, Browning went to Remington. Tragically, the president of Remington died of a heart attack as Browning waited to offer them the gun. This forced Browning to look overseas to produce the shotgun. It was manufactured by FN (a company that had already produced Browning-designed pistols) starting in 1902. Browning would later license Remington to produce it as their Model 11 and Sportsmen (it was also built under license by Savage as their model 720, Franchi as their AL-48, in Italy by Breda, and in Russia by TOZ).[3] The Model 11 was the first auto-loading shotgun made in the USA. Production in Belgium continued until the start of World War II, when Browning-marked examples were produced by Remington Arms in the United States.[4] Unlike the Remington Model 11, the Remington-produced Browning shotguns had magazine cutoffs. Some 850,000 Remington Model 11 shotguns were produced before production ended in 1947. In 1952, production returned to FN, where it continued to be produced until the end. However, the majority of production moved to Japan in 1975. Finally, in 1998, manufacture of A-5s ceased except for a few commemorative models created at FN in 1999. By that time, it was well established as the second-best-selling auto-loading shotgun in U.S. history, after the Remington 1100.[3]
 
I have one with a four digit serial number. It was made in the second year of production. It is a little different than the ones made later but generally the same. I have a picture of John Brownings work shop taken in 1897 and there is one sitting in the window sill of his shop and this one looks just like it. It functions perfectly and I will never get rid of it if I can help it.
 
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