Found a Remington Model 11 for sale locally. Is US marked and has a 21" barrel. Asking price is $250.00
Were these used in combat any or for prison guards ?
Thanks.
Found a Remington Model 11 for sale locally. Is US marked and has a 21" barrel. Asking price is $250.00
Were these used in combat any or for prison guards ?
Thanks.
Yes, they were issued for combat and for guard duty.
The barrel should be 20", and should have a serial number matching the receiver.
For that price you can't really go wrong it is a (terrible) shooter.
Your shoulder bears the mass of not only the shell, but also the recoiling barrel. Not real pleasant to shoot.
IF the barrel is mismatched have a gunsmith check the headspace. They were matched numbered for a reason. You risk a KABOOM.
They are a joy to shoot.
You must remove the foreend and set up the spring and rings in the right order and direction to match the ammo you're using , though.
Setting it for soft ammo and shooting slugs or buck will beat you up.
Setting it for hard and shooting whimpy will cause malfunctions .
Gun needs proper lube , but shoot the gun with the tube , spring , and brake rings dry . Reoil them for storage.
Chris
It's Parkerized and the S/N is 490958. has a bead front sight.
The majority of them were used for teaching "lead", on skeet fields, to air crews manning machine guns for air combat. They do need to be set up properly as emmagee1917 stated. Do however, lightly lubricate the mag tube. If shot dry, the friction rings can gall the mag tube. I have found that even when set for "heavy" loads ( clean and lightly lubricated ) they will function with field loads. A lot of what folks nowdays consider "high brass" dove loads were considered as heavy waterfowl loads when that gun was made.
FWIW,
Emri
Actually, they came in both riot and longer barrel lengths. Commonly found are 26" with a Cutts on the end and no choke markings.
The long barrels were used for gunnery training and sport.
The short (20") barrels were used for combat and guard duty.
The riot guns are very common, so they should have seen use.
I have a sportsman model riot gun and took it to the local trap range, I don't know if breaking clay or the looks I got were more fun. I will have to take my 97 trench one of these days.
[QUOTE=emmagee1917;330629]They are a joy to shoot.
You must remove the foreend and set up the spring and rings in the right order and direction to match the ammo you're using , though.
Setting it for soft ammo and shooting slugs or buck will beat you up.
Setting it for hard and shooting whimpy will cause malfunctions .
Gun needs proper lube , but shoot the gun with the tube , spring , and brake rings dry . Reoil them for storage.
Chris[/QUOTE
OK. How is the adjustment accomplished. Should it be marked under the forearm?
As noted, most were probably used teaching aerial gunners, followed by use of the short barrels as guard guns at defense plants. It would make a terrible combat weapon good only for very close combat, and terribly slow to load.
Drill Sargeant
http://www.ar15.com/archive/topic.html?b=6&f=1&t=372992
4th one down has the picture you want .
Chris