harrygrey382
Well-Known Member
Thanks for the advice explanation. Bear in mind I will be buying sight-unseen. I’m not driving thousands of kms around the state for a $500 gun, and nothing is ever close - there are zero local options. I’ve never considered importing, just the paper work would be 2-3x the cost of the gun and there’s heaps of choice here. I hadn’t considered barrel thickness and refinishing, didn’t even know that was an issue! And 150k miles would be extremely low mileage for me… I’ll just be relying on the gunshop’s word, which I’ve found (seeing as I’ve bought every rifle I’ve ever bought sight unseen) is generally reliable. I’ll have to accept the fit, and if it’s bad enough to worry me I’ll have to do something about it. But your check sounds a good one.Have a read of the Vintage Gun Journals - lots of really useful information Read The Vintage Gun Journal by Vintage Guns
Then I would look locally in Australia for guns. There will have been many many British made shotguns sent down to Aus back in the day.
Two main types
Sidelocks - generally on top end guns. Are things of beauty, but, and its a big but, they have lots of small parts in their lock work and typically cost of repair starts at a few hundred pounds. Mostly parts will need to be made from a piece of steel, filed and cut to shape, fitted, then removed, hardened and annealed and then stoned fir final fit.
Box locks - originally invented by Messers Anson & Deally who were employed at Westly Richards - one was the gunsmith, the other the MD and their names were on the original patent. It is a very much simpler action with about 4 moving parts on each side. Use of the original patent was granted widely to the rest of the Birmingham guntrade and large numbers of boxlock guns were produced by various makers. Some were finished by the maker themselves (Webley & Scott) and sold under those names, but vast numbers were supplied to other retailers around the world in various states of finish, with the local retailer then finishing and putting their name on it.
What to look for:
1) Screws and pins - a good gunsmith will know how to use a well fitting turnscrew and the correct downward pressure and force to remove a screw or pin without damaging it. If the screws are burred then an idiot has been inside the gun.
2) Barrels - on the flats of the barrels will be the proof marks. One of the marks indicates the original barrel bore dimensions. Over time bores do wear, but most of the wear will come from barrels being cleaned up because somebody hasn’t bothered to clean them and they have got pitted.
Barrel wall thickness - not marked on the barrels, but thickness again gives an indication of wear. Guns originally had various different thicknesses- some were thin 20 thou from factory, others were 30 to 35 thou. If the walls are thin then there is not much future room to do other work. It’s like a car engine with 150,000 miles on it.
Much more important though is overall condition. The barrels should ring like a bell. If not then major work is required.
Overall condition- look for a gun in good overall unmessed condition. Try and find something that has been put away well cleaned and not restored. Look at plenty and you will build up a good idea of what works for you.
Fit - simple - look at the top corner of the room. Close your eyes and mount the gun - if its pointing where you look then its a reasonable fit. If it doesn’t move on to the next.
Happy hunting.
The boxlock vs sidelock thing is interesting - I’ve been reading up on it. Yes the finest are generally sidelock, but it’s seemingly an inferior design and result? The only (dubious) advantage being more area for engraving? The Brno ZP49 sound like a nice sidelock ejector.
Yeah there is but it’s infrequent and with auction house premiums doesn’t end up that cheap. Buying interstate is not an issueThere is, or used to be an auction house near Melbourne? I don't know the law in Australia about buying in one State and transporting to another.
That’s something I’ve been struggling to get my head around - it seems with a lot of the smaller names they may all be using the same actions, but there are sometime exceptions which I would like to know. From what I can tell Greener and BSA did make all their own stuff? The Greeners consistently command a higher price than most of the smaller names (army and navy being an exception), and this is what I’m trying to decide if it’s worth it or not. For example there’s a nice Holloway and Naughton for $500, good condition tight action guaranteed good working order. I google this name and reports are that it is up there with the best - but surely this can’t be right or it would never be that cheap? Or are extractors that undesirable? They would be nice (my single barrel Stevens is ejector), but I don’t know how much they really help in reality…There really are so many “makes” of old English SXS guns. Most towns at one time had a business that sold them. Of course they were mostly Birmingham made box locks that were finished for or by the local sellers and sold under their own name. If you aren’t fussed about having ejectors they cost peanuts these days. In fact most firearms dealers in the UK really don’t want them, some won’t have them at all and some, if you are buying a new gun will take them in part exchange at a price that is strangely similar to the discount you would otherwise have got.
Which means many old guns are sadly going to the great furnace in the sky. Which is good if you want one.
The main thing though isn’t necessarily looking for particular makes, but condition. Get a nice one that’s mechanically sound with good barrels and you’ll be good to go.
The Cashmore is in a similar state, but $375. The cheapest Greener is $800, and it’s with full full chokes which I dont really want - all others are over $1k. And with ZP49s sitting in the $600 region they’re interesting, but I like the idea of it being English. This is the context of my ponderings. I could buy a $1k+ gun but will the snakes really be any more dead?
Yep@harrygrey382, has it got to be hammerless?

