Anyone heard of this before?
We were shooting some "following pairs" on the weekend, and one of the guys, who is normally a pretty high percentage shooter, dropped a couple of pairs in a row.
Then he made as if to check his extended choke tubes, and discovered that his barrel had split!
He was shooting a new 28g Browning semi.
There was about a 3/4" split on the underside end of the barrel, running parallel to the tube. The choke tube was long gone, and at the split the metal was flared out.... weird that no one (especially him!) saw or heard anything different when the tube blew out.
He figures to chop it down a couple inches and it'll be his grouser now.
We were shooting some "following pairs" on the weekend, and one of the guys, who is normally a pretty high percentage shooter, dropped a couple of pairs in a row.
Then he made as if to check his extended choke tubes, and discovered that his barrel had split!
There was about a 3/4" split on the underside end of the barrel, running parallel to the tube. The choke tube was long gone, and at the split the metal was flared out.... weird that no one (especially him!) saw or heard anything different when the tube blew out.
He figures to chop it down a couple inches and it'll be his grouser now.


















































