Some time back I was given one of these by a friend. I had been overloaded and the barrel swelled at the breech. I trimmed the breech of the barrel and re-tapped and plugged it. I hope to build a new half stock for it and use the patchbox and buttplate. The triggerguard wound up on a pistol I built. Some body else needed the lock. The bore of the barrel is surprisingly clean. These were also made in a 28 guage, a friend bought one in 28ga for five dollars at a gun show many moons ago. Good luck with it, George. P.S. The barrel of my 9mm is a smoothbore, so it will make a shotgun.
My barrel also has the proof marks with the little Spanish soldier with the "X" marked shield (underneath the barrel). 700kg/cm2 is 9956.34lb/in2 - just a tad under 10,000 lbs per square inch pressure proofed. Just like most Italian and Spanish barrels. So it could be fired - low charges maybe. The barrel is the main "good" part on my gun, but even it seems to be plugged. So it isn't a big priority for me - maybe one day I'll fool with it more.The 9mm barrel I have had Spanish proof marks and pressure limits marked in kg/. I remember thinking it worked out to about 10,000 lbs/square in. With the thinness of the barrel, I would not push it, but it seems like a decent steel barrel.
My barrel also has the proof marks with the little Spanish soldier with the "X" marked shield (underneath the barrel). 700kg/cm2 is 9956.34lb/in2 - just a tad under 10,000 lbs per square inch pressure proofed. Just like most Italian and Spanish barrels. So it could be fired - low charges maybe. The barrel is the main "good" part on my gun, but even it seems to be plugged. So it isn't a big priority for me - maybe one day I'll fool with it more.
I've tinkered with a couple of these little Spanish guns in the past, think they're safe enough with mild loads. Dixie Gun Works sold some of these years ago, I remember seeing them in their old catalogs from the 1960's (think I still have one packed away upstairs, need to find it just for the nostalgia). They used that style breech on many of the early Spanish imports besides these little guns. The early "Kentucky" style rifles and handguns were set up the same way. Bought one used once that I thought had a ball in it. Turned out the breech plug was longer than I thought and went farther up in the barrel than expected. The long flash channel was plugged with crap so air couldn't get through. They are fairly easy to unbreech though for inspection or cleaning
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