Bobnotthecat
Cast Iron
- Joined
- Jul 5, 2009
- Location
- S.W. PA
Sirs,
Some years back a friend of mine brought to me a 22 cal. Rem. gallery pump that had been relined by a gunsmith to correct very poor shooting. The gunsmith had passed on before the barrel liner could be trimmed and chambered. I did the job for him, and he and his grandsons had a blast with it.
I thought at the time that he had devalued it because it was more collectable in its prelined state. My thinking at the time was that it was unlikely it had been so worn from shooting but had been tampered with as to purposefully defeat its accuracy. The other day my friend brought to me two Rem. original barrels for that model that he bought from another gunsmith's estate reported as never having been used and wanting my opinion as to their condition. After a good cleaning I found there is no evidence of rifling in them if there ever had been.
My several questions are:
Did this lining devalue this as collectable?
Could a 22 cal. really wear all traces of rifling with use?
Is it possible that ordered as a gallery rifle could have come from the factory with a purposely defeated barrel?
Were carneys tampering with gallery gun rifle barrels or just knocking the sights off?
Thanks for your attention and look forward to all replies.
Bob....not the cat.
Some years back a friend of mine brought to me a 22 cal. Rem. gallery pump that had been relined by a gunsmith to correct very poor shooting. The gunsmith had passed on before the barrel liner could be trimmed and chambered. I did the job for him, and he and his grandsons had a blast with it.
I thought at the time that he had devalued it because it was more collectable in its prelined state. My thinking at the time was that it was unlikely it had been so worn from shooting but had been tampered with as to purposefully defeat its accuracy. The other day my friend brought to me two Rem. original barrels for that model that he bought from another gunsmith's estate reported as never having been used and wanting my opinion as to their condition. After a good cleaning I found there is no evidence of rifling in them if there ever had been.
My several questions are:
Did this lining devalue this as collectable?
Could a 22 cal. really wear all traces of rifling with use?
Is it possible that ordered as a gallery rifle could have come from the factory with a purposely defeated barrel?
Were carneys tampering with gallery gun rifle barrels or just knocking the sights off?
Thanks for your attention and look forward to all replies.
Bob....not the cat.