Mount Sweetness
CGN Ultra frequent flyer
- Location
- Southern Ontario
Who used to make the early CZ's before Huglu got involved?
The euro CZ's, who made them?
The euro CZ's, who made them?
Who used to make the early CZ's before Huglu got involved?
The euro CZ's, who made them?
As far as I know, the earlier ones were made in the Brno factory , but I may be wrong .
Cat
I was unaware that churchills came with an alloy receiver, Ive owned many, very good guns, built by Akkar in Turkey, what model has the aluminum receiver?Just to resurrect this dead thread....
I bought a Churchill O/U in 12ga, aluminum receiver in 2020 while I still lived in BC. I bought it to get into trap and skeet. So it got used a lot (target loads).
In 2021 I moved to a acreage in Saskatchewan. It has been my nuisance/predator/duck/goose gun ever since. It gets a lot of use, and in the fall its all 3" heavy/mag loads for ducks and geese... this shotgun has amazed me in its build quality and reliability in the last 5 years. I punish it in the fall and it keeps going. If anything it has only broke in and is nicer to use now (barrel to receiver hinge and lockup was very tight when new). Now it opens and closes superbly while still having zero play or slop. Ive had zero issues with the barrel selector/safety, and the ejectors still throw empty hulls very fast and smartly.
The only thing I've done with the gun is buying some nice chokes for it.
If youre looking for a great starter O/U shotgun id have zero hesitation in recommending the Churchill models
I have one of those Ultra M37s. I doubt just day to day bird hunting will be a problem. One wouldn't shoot skeet with it given the recoil it dishes out.Once upon a time Ithaca produced M37 Ultrafeatherlight/Ultralight 12 & 20 gauge chambering.
They don't use aluminum anymore.
Rumour on the internet this aluminum alloy receiver circa 1978 would not hold up to frequent firing if the hunter shot it often enuf.
Upland hunters and multiple bird seasons exposed this weakness.
While 350 rounds may seem like a lot for a hunting shotgun, it is virtually nothing for a trap or skeet gun.I picked up a 20 ga SxS Churchill last year and I'm very happy with it. Put about 350 rounds through it on the trap field so far and no problems at all.
Either way, I would be far more inclined towards a steel receiver on any gun given personal bias.Supercub. In retrospect you are likely quite correct. Grouse and pheasant limits just do not impose long strings of shooting afield.
Such as migratory birds from a blind.



























