I wonder at Pedersoli using such a bad finish in the first place .
And why it was applied so poorly.
I wonder at Pedersoli using such a bad finish in the first place .
I haven't filed the front sight yet but it is going to be just a nub when I am done. It shoot great thoughLooks like mine. I had to file the front sight WAY down to barely a nub before it would hit POA though. Probably just an issue of how I like to hold the gun & stick my cheek on it so that the flat of the barrel near my eye comes almost to the bottom of the front sight. Fun gun, though. Certainly got people scratching their heads when I showed up at a trap range with it.
As far as wood is concerned , remember these were cheap guns in the first place and wouldn't have been stocked with highly figured wood. just plain walnut .I have a Pedersoli trade gun. I could not stand the factory stock finish. I stripped it off, and applied many coats of TruOil. Happily there was a real nice piece of walnut underneath.
The browning is fake. Similar to Ceracoat. The older Peds looked very much like actual browning (mine included). The newer ones look like brown paint. The flats on yours look terrible. Nothing like mine. I'd return the gun for that alone. The Lott lock is slow. Nothing can be done about that. It is darn reliable though. Drill the flash hole out to at least 1/16" or greater. A Treso liner or a Ped beryllium bronze liner is best. The trigger pull weight is terrible. Mine is around 8#. Very little can be done about this. Lightening the sear spring can help, but not dramatically. The front sight is brass. Sorry Ped decided to paint over it. You will likely need to file it down some to make POA = POI. That is a good thing.I just took possession of this gun I bought from Dixie.
The description said it came with a brass front sight, but it appears to be an iron sight and is painted brown like the rest of the barrel. Which was a pretty shoddy job. No big deal as I planned to strip it anyway. But could there be brass under that sight's paint?
Is have the wrong sight or is this how they come now and Dixie's description is wrong? I'm guessing there are more than a few of these in member's hands as I ran into some posts talking about modifying and inletting the serpent side plate thing.
Also, I've never seen a hex to round barrel done quite like this one. It almost looks like it has a twist in it and has two wedding bands/rings... is that normal?
Just want to clear up a few things before doing any work to it. Dixie's smith is out til next week.
I think it will make a great gun. I can't believe how perfect it fits me. The sight picture is spot on.
View attachment 202797
Here is the weird way it goes from hex to round. Not like my other fowler, that's for sure. You can also see the paint job. My BB carbine was done much better.
View attachment 202798
Seems like decent wood. Supposedly American walnut. But I want to darken it. Right now it looks like every other Pedersoli I have.
View attachment 202799
Never thought that Pedersoli's quality would vary so much but in this day and age I guess it's really not that surprising.
This is not a NEW idea --- many "trade guns" were painted --- obviousy made down to a price. In some cases they even painted fake (now called "faux" by the trendies!) "stub twist" on the barrels and as for the butts - YUK!!!!! This was continued well into the 20th Century -- and many of the guns which appeared for sale in the 1960's Centenary sufferred the same fate.I just took possession of this gun I bought from Dixie.
The description said it came with a brass front sight, but it appears to be an iron sight and is painted brown like the rest of the barrel. Which was a pretty shoddy job. No big deal as I planned to strip it anyway. But could there be brass under that sight's paint?
Is have the wrong sight or is this how they come now and Dixie's description is wrong? I'm guessing there are more than a few of these in member's hands as I ran into some posts talking about modifying and inletting the serpent side plate thing.
Also, I've never seen a hex to round barrel done quite like this one. It almost looks like it has a twist in it and has two wedding bands/rings... is that normal?
Just want to clear up a few things before doing any work to it. Dixie's smith is out til next week.
I think it will make a great gun. I can't believe how perfect it fits me. The sight picture is spot on.
View attachment 202797
Here is the weird way it goes from hex to round. Not like my other fowler, that's for sure. You can also see the paint job. My BB carbine was done much better.
View attachment 202798
Seems like decent wood. Supposedly American walnut. But I want to darken it. Right now it looks like every other Pedersoli I have.
View attachment 202799
Cheap guns!As far as wood is concerned , remember these were cheap guns in the first place and wouldn't have been stocked with highly figured wood. just plain walnut .
He was referring to original trade guns as being made cheaply. And they were! He was not referring to modern day replicas.Cheap guns!
Only on this forum would somebody describe a $800.+ gun “cheap”
Love my “cheap guns”, mine are tools, dependable, durable, and pretty enough that I hang them on the wall.
This is not a NEW idea --- many "trade guns" were painted --- obviousy made down to a price. In some cases they even painted fake (now called "faux" by the trendies!) "stub twist" on the barrels and as for the butts - YUK!!!!! This was continued well into the 20th Century -- and many of the guns which appeared for sale in the 1960's Centenary sufferred the same fate.
If they bought a Pedersoli Trade Gun with a true rust browned barrel, it would have to have been made prior to about 2005, as that is about the time frame they began using the Cerakote ceramic finish on just about everything except guns that were blued. I don't even know if they had the Trade Gun in their catalog prior to coming out with the Cerakote finish. They even have a French Gray finish that is Cerakote, as well as a Cerakote chrome finish. They even use it on many models in the $2,500 to $3,000 range. I first noticed the finish at the 2007 SHOT Show in Vegas. I had been attending the show since 1999, and 2007 was the first I had seen or heard of it.I was not speaking historically.
If you read further on you will see a few members saying their trade guns actually had a "browned" barrel and not the painted one that mine came with. (As well as my Brown Bess carbine.) Others have the painted barrel. And one member even suggested his barrel was powder coated.
If they bought a Pedersoli Trade Gun with a true rust browned barrel, it would have to have been made prior to about 2005, as that is about the time frame they began using the Cerakote ceramic finish on just about everything except guns that were blued. I don't even know if they had the Trade Gun in their catalog prior to coming out with the Cerakote finish. They even have a French Gray finish that is Cerakote, as well as a Cerakote chrome finish. They even use it on many models in the $2,500 to $3,000 range. I first noticed the finish at the 2007 SHOT Show in Vegas. I had been attending the show since 1999, and 2007 was the first I had seen or heard of it.
If you notice in their advertising, they don't say "Rust Brown Finish" the ads read "Rust Brown Color Finish" I don't care for the finish and try to find a kit which has an unfinished barrel when ones are available. The finish is so tough, acetone will not cut it. Easiest way to remove it is bead blasting, with sanding being the most time consuming.
According to an email from Pedersoli cust. service, they use a hot chemical bath not unlike a hot bluing bath to brown their barrels. It’s not paint or epoxy.I’ve seen a couple of these guns.
The one flaw that pedersoli needs to get right on this gun and it’s brown bess is the thimbles are inlet way too shallow and pinned to low. Too much pressure in the wrong direction and those thimbles will break the stock.
The finish on the barrel is a chemical coloring finish, not easy to put on and not easy to remove.
Some octagon to round barrels without wedding bands have flats that fade into the round section.
A lot of Dutch and french muskets were made that way.
Enter your email address to join: