Forend irons on "Pin" Guns (extractor)
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Forend irons on "Pin" Guns (extractor)
I just stumbled into a 12 ga Pin Gun marked "Sterlingworth Company, Philadelphia, PA USA". It came in without a forend iron. I plan to restock it and am unclear which forend iron I need. It is clearly not the same as the Fox Sterlingworth forends,nor the graded irons but I think there are at least two other forend irons out there for Sterlingworths. (Non ejector gun.) Thank you for any assistance. Gil Russell
Too much of a good thing is....wonderful. M. West
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Re: Forend irons on "Pin" Guns (extractor)
what is the serial number?
in the McIntosh book discusses the variations
an early leaf spring type
and
the coil Kramer foreend from late 1910 on - and has some patent drawings
mine from 1911 is still incredibly tight
in the McIntosh book discusses the variations
an early leaf spring type
and
the coil Kramer foreend from late 1910 on - and has some patent drawings
mine from 1911 is still incredibly tight
"If there is a heaven it must have thinning aspen gold, and flighting woodcock, and a bird dog" GBE
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Re: Forend irons on "Pin" Guns (extractor)
The early The Sterlingworth Co. guns from 1910 used a forearm with the Baker J-spring type latch --


By 1911 when the Sterlingworth became an A.H. Fox Gun Co. marked gun, they went to using the J.C. Kremer & A.H. Fox Patent No. 1,029,374 with the spring loaded roller in the forearm iron and a fixed forearm loop on the barrels. However, the next year Parker Bros. introduced their Trojan Grade using a very similar forearm fastening. They worked out a deal with the A.H. Fox Gun Co., and Fox went to using their F.T. Russell Patent No. 1,029,229 where the roller is fixed in the forearm iron and the coil spring loaded catch is in the forearm loop on the barrels. This was the latch they were using on ejector guns, and remained the latch used on Sterlingworths to the end.


By 1911 when the Sterlingworth became an A.H. Fox Gun Co. marked gun, they went to using the J.C. Kremer & A.H. Fox Patent No. 1,029,374 with the spring loaded roller in the forearm iron and a fixed forearm loop on the barrels. However, the next year Parker Bros. introduced their Trojan Grade using a very similar forearm fastening. They worked out a deal with the A.H. Fox Gun Co., and Fox went to using their F.T. Russell Patent No. 1,029,229 where the roller is fixed in the forearm iron and the coil spring loaded catch is in the forearm loop on the barrels. This was the latch they were using on ejector guns, and remained the latch used on Sterlingworths to the end.
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