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1960 ithaca model 49 price today
1960 ithaca model 49 price today






1960 ithaca model 49 price today
  1. 1960 ithaca model 49 price today full#
  2. 1960 ithaca model 49 price today plus#

Such guns are available on both the new and used markets. This article is about perfectly serviceable field guns built to last. I am not talking about-and do not recommend-poorly manufactured doubles, such as the low priced models manufactured in Turkey and Russia today and sold under a multitude of brands, the most commonly encountered of which may be Stoeger (now owned by the Beretta conglomerate).

1960 ithaca model 49 price today plus#

New manufacturing technologies like monobloc construction, CNC machining, investment casting and laser guided checkering, among others, plus the expansion of the world economy in Asia and Eastern Europe, has allowed double guns to make something of a comeback. The legend of the side-by-side shotgun has lived on to captivate a new generation of shooters. They are great guns, but their price puts these and the other guns like them beyond the scope of an article on "Affordable Doubles." Also beyond the scope of this article are most of the classic American double guns of the 20th Century, specifically including the Parker Bros., L.C. New or used, a Grulla, Pedro Arrizabalaga, David Mckay Brown, Purdy, Holland & Holland, Merkel, Francotte, Piotti, or Abbiatico & Salvinelli double gun is usually beyond the means of most aficionados. Two more big shows the next 2 weekends.The steeply rising production costs of the classic side-by-side shotgun eventually drove most manufacturers into extinction or forced their products into price classes that only the wealthiest shooters could afford. It didn't last long and it was a small show. It had a little wear but it was original. It is very hard to find nice original pre-war 37's of any level. Original condition, options, and year of production command premiums. Yes, earlier guns have a premium as do nice 16's and 20's. Show season is in high gear here in NY and you can buy a decent basic 12 gauge all day for about 375 or less.

1960 ithaca model 49 price today full#

I had it redone at King Ferry back in the 90's and I bought a shorter choke tube barrel for it as well.įind a nice early 12 gauge with a 30 inch full choke barrel and you should have a nice representation of a period fowling piece. I have used it on waterfowl, turkeys, and deer and it preforms flawlessy. Nothing special about it, just a 3 inch gun with a 30 inch VR full choke. It was a show gun that Ithaca used for promos. They were advertised as being as good in the field as they were on the trap and skeet fields. A lot of early T's and S's were purchased for waterfowling.

1960 ithaca model 49 price today

The later Supremes and Target grades are also desirable. The 1950's and earlier are the desirable 37's. Yes, it was gone from the basic base model. Hand cut checkering was offered a long time after the 1950's, one just had to pay for it. If you are patient and are perhaps willing to take one that shows its age, you will find one.Ĭlassic years for the Model 37? Just depends on what you want and how much you were willing to spend. And there's a pre-War 37 that's been sitting on the rack at my local Cabela's for over a year at $349.95, and it looks to be a sound restoration candidate. Pre-1955 guns show up on and regularly, often at quite reasonable prices.

1960 ithaca model 49 price today

One thought: vintage 37s are probably the least-suited guns for waterfowling: their 2.75-inch chambers and light weight are big obstacles to overcome if you are contemplating something like pass shooting at ducks or geese-not to mention the limitations of running steel or bismuth through them. I was given a 1976 Model 37, with the pressed checkering and the 400-grit polish level on the receiver and barrel, and it was kind of sad to see how far the product had diminished. The guns that were made in the 1960s through the closure of the King Ferry factory saw this decline continue. By the late 1950s, when cut checkering was gone and the final polishing step before bluing was either shortened or eliminated outright, the Ithaca 37 had really become just another pumpgun, comparable to a Remington Wingmaster or a Winchester Model 12 of the day. If you compare the degree of polish and the quality of the bluing that was put on pre-War 37s with what followed, there's a gradual evolution downward in quality. 1977Cutcher's assessment is spot-on: pre-1955 guns really are a cut above, and the pre-War guns a cut above that-they really were the high-water mark in terms of fit and finish.








1960 ithaca model 49 price today