We all have opinions but I have one a high standard flight king in 28ga and it doesn't belong in the same line IMO
I quote
Between Remington M31 and Winchester M12.
Nice example you have there enjoy it
Cheers
I think the sub-gauges by High Standard were a completely different design, at least the 20 gauge was. And not for the better.
So just to clarify on my research. JC Higgins was made by High Standard for Sears and Roebuck Co. from 1948 to 1960. By 1960, Sears changed store brands from JC Higgins to Ted Williams and dropped High Standard as a maker for Winchester who made the Model 1200 pump for them.
High Standard then evolved the Model 20 into the Model 200 Flite-King. Over the next couple of decades, the design was cheapened so there was eventual bad rep on the guns in the late 60s-70s. The design lives on in the Mossberg 500 series which is still around today.
The 1948-1960 JC Higgins Model 20 (by High Standard) is a good utilitarian pump with a lot of deluxe features for the price with some economizing of the Remington Model 31 design. I like my '67 Wingmaster and it does everything well since it was originally designed to be inexpensive, reliable, modular, and versatile.
My last research item (anecdotal, although I don't have a source yet), shows that the High-Standard model lost to the Remington 870 in US military shotgun trials because of its non-removable barrel.[/QUOTE]
and broken slide action arm issues was it not??
I didn't see the broken slide arm cited but that may because by then, High Standard removed the coil spring on the magazine tube. Definitely an issue on the earlier ones though. 870 had twin-action bars, although given the history of the US military using single-action bar shotguns, not sure how much it played in their assessment back then.
Any experience with the even older Stevens 520/620 series? JMB design.
I was surprised to see how similar the action is to a modern mossy 500
I didn't see the broken slide arm cited but that may because by then, High Standard removed the coil spring on the magazine tube. Definitely an issue on the earlier ones though. 870 had twin-action bars, although given the history of the US military using single-action bar shotguns, not sure how much it played in their assessment back then.
Any experience with the even older Stevens 520/620 series? JMB design.



























