Who can install a full-choke in my barrel blank?

Check with Brownell's on their website and see if removable choke tubes are available in .410. Or you might know already.

If they are available, they would be your best bet.

IIRC choking a barrel will require swaging it down from the outside, then refinishing it. Not something very many guys are set up to do.

Good luck.

Cheers
Trev
 
I think you'll find trevj is right on.The demand for screw in choke tubes for a .410 is almost nonexistant, therefore you'll have to hunt hard and long to find a smith set up to do this.I've never seen screw in chokes for a .410. Good luck
 
"...MIGHT find a machinist..." Isn't legal anymore. Any business working on firearms has to be licensed and any employee handling firearms has to have a PAL. As daft as it is.
Precision Arms is exactly where I'd take it. Real smithies who know what they're doing.
 
"...MIGHT find a machinist..." Isn't legal anymore. Any business working on firearms has to be licensed and any employee handling firearms has to have a PAL. As daft as it is.
Precision Arms is exactly where I'd take it. Real smithies who know what they're doing.

Don't need a license to work on a a barrell :slap:
 
All of the Browning .410's come with screw-in invector chokes, so that may be a starting point. I beleive that Remington small gauge guns have screw-in chokes in them as of 2006 also.

All of the Briley and Kolar sub-gauge tube sets come with screw in chokes in the .410 so those companies may engage in the work you are considering, but that would mean going south of the border.
 
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