Len the dog
Well-Known Member
If you were shooting walked up partridges would you take your 10 bore wildfowler? No, so why use the same gun that you would on a high bird day?
Shurely not.Some inconsistency, shurely?
No, because I have better options.If you were shooting walked up partridges would you take your 10 bore wildfowler? No, so why use the same gun that you would on a high bird day?
Have a chat with Graham Mackinlay in Dumbarton. He specialises in Scottish guns and most of his good stuff never even makes it onto his website. Let him know what you are looking for.No, because I have better options.
But if a 10 bore was all I had, that’s what I’d carry.
Quite a lot of people only have the one gun, an OU is more versatile than a light box action SBS.
I’m still looking for a Dixon round action, I’m willing to compromise my beliefs for personal satisfaction.
I think there's a truth in that but also there's the fact that most people seem to come into shooting via clay pigeon shooting and so learn on an O/U gun. Whereas when I was a kid clay pigeon shooting except specialised trap and skeet was seen, in my circles I grew up in, almost as "poor man's shooting" for those that didn't have access to game shooting, wildfowling or pigeon shooting. Now of course it has evolved into a sport all of its own and those that do it in many many cases wouldn't even want to shoot live quarry even if cost free. So the better gun for that is the O/U and as the prejudice against it has fallen away (even on a formal driven day) so the demand for a S/B/S has fallen. I think that they are likely to suffer the same fate as the revolver of old. Some have and keep, some will buy and try for nostalgia but for the most part other than the "rare" the "interesting" and the "desirable" the rest have no value. The English 2 1/2" and the Spanish 70mm boxlock non-ejector is obsolete and pretty much worthless. Indeed they now are bundled three or four together in auction and still struggle to make more than £10 or so.They are specialist tools designed to do one thing and one thing only, shoot game at medium ranges.
That is all very dependent upon what sort of shooting you do. For me, a light and fast handling side by side SLE covers nearly everything I do. I occasionally have a go at sporting clays with my son where I use a sporter O/U, but if I had to choose one gun it would be the side by side.an OU is more versatile than a light box action SBS.
I think that’s absolutely right, when I started shotgun shooting, live game is all I shot, now it’s switched 180 degrees, most people are shooting clays first, then progressing to game, because clays are accessible to everyone and game shooting is expensive.I think there's a truth in that but also there's the fact that most people seem to come into shooting via clay pigeon shooting and so learn on an O/U gun. Whereas when I was a kid clay pigeon shooting except specialised trap and skeet was seen, in my circles I grew up in, almost as "poor man's shooting" for those that didn't have access to game shooting, wildfowling or pigeon shooting. Now of course it has evolved into a sport all of its own and those that do it in many many cases wouldn't even want to shoot live quarry even if cost free. So the better gun for that is the O/U and as the prejudice against it has fallen away (even on a formal driven day) so the demand for a S/B/S has fallen. I think that they are likely to suffer the same fate as the revolver of old. Some have and keep, some will buy and try for nostalgia but for the most part other than the "rare" the "interesting" and the "desirable" the rest have no value. The English 2 1/2" and the Spanish 70mm boxlock non-ejector is obsolete and pretty much worthless. Indeed they now are bundled three or four together in auction and still struggle to make more than £10 or
That is all very dependent upon what sort of shooting you do. For me, a light and fast handling side by side SLE covers nearly everything I do. I occasionally have a go at sporting clays with my son where I use a sporter O/U, but if I had to choose one gun it would be the side by side.
Jesus H Christ in a handcart, do you think I’m made of money?Have a chat with Graham Mackinlay in Dumbarton. He specialises in Scottish guns and most of his good stuff never even makes it onto his website. Let him know what you are looking for.
You did say Dickson round action!Jesus H Christ in a handcart, do you think I’m made of money?
That’s at least one and mostly two, zeros above my pay grade.
I’ll just keep talking quality old SBS’s down for another few decade or two and it shall be mine!
Thanks for the advice.
They are really nice guns….
However he does have many nice guns at much more affordable prices.Jesus H Christ in a handcart, do you think I’m made of money?
That’s at least one and mostly two, zeros above my pay grade.
I’ll just keep talking quality old SBS’s down for another few decade or two and it shall be mine!
Thanks for the advice.
They are really nice guns….
My H&H came from Graham. He has a good selection of stuff, I'd looked for a sleeved gun (like mine) which was surprisingly affordable.Have a chat with Graham Mackinlay in Dumbarton. He specialises in Scottish guns and most of his good stuff never even makes it onto his website. Let him know what you are looking for.
Nowt wrong with a sleeved gun if they are done well. You have a gun that should have plenty of life, able to take modern cartridges and all without breaking the bank. But it depends on the sleeving. I have handled some - look very nice, but handling of a fence post, whereas others you would never now they have been sleeved.My H&H came from Graham. He has a good selection of stuff, I'd looked for a sleeved gun (like mine) which was surprisingly affordable.
And is a lot more comfortable to carry on the arm, the Browning type is positively unpleasant.The side by side ejector has one massive advantage over any equivalent O/U. It has better gape for quick reloading after one, or two shots have been fired. Where birds are being flushed to a gun or coming into to decoys the ability to make three or four shots quickly makes a huge difference between getting a shot away at a fresh bird. In truth even then an easy-opener ejector or self-opener ejector is even better. Yet maybe only three or four times when I have shot two hundred bird or near two hundred bird days have I ever needed that fast reload. And actually a pair of guns and a loader would have been better still even if that pair were non-ejectors.
Hmmm. The Glock trigger is actually ok after the first round if you release the trigger in a controlled way until you feel it click - much lighter pull but lots of muscle memory required….And is a lot more comfortable to carry on the arm, the Browning type is positively unpleasant.
It’s alas true that Glock-itis has largely replaced the revolver in the USE and given us a generation of shooters who have never experienced a decent trigger.
However debating SxS v O/U does at least exclude the semi auto/pump from consideration, they remain rare for clay shooting.
40 yards is the normally accepted range of a shotgun for clean reliable kills. Always has been and with modern steel still is. It is the equivalent of 200 with a stalking rifle.My Reilly heavily engraved No2 sidelock ejector has quite thick barrels and is chambered for 2/12" cartridges. The chokes are imp and 1/4 and I use 21gr cartridges. If I use it on driven or walked up birds it kills them nicely out or up to 40yds high. Beyond that I don't usually take the shot and have a mental and practical guide to assess that distance. I have had and used many 0/U guns but the SbS still gives me better results, average 3 out of 5 hits on birds.![]()