Hey, all!
I've had a Remington Sportsman 48 that I inherited from my dad, sitting in my gun cabinet for several years. It's been gathering dust, since I don't hunt with it, or shoot skeet.
Anyway, I'm considering having the barrel cut down (it's something like 24" or so, with a Cutts Compensator and a Modified Choke stuck on the end--VERY end-heavy and points like a sledgehammer) to use it as a HD gun, and was wondering about several points:
1) Am I about to commit some heinous act against an as-yet-unknown-to-me treasure? I've come to grips with the sentimentality of it (I have other, more cherished guns from him, so this isn't an issue). Is this some rare piece, though, that should be in some collector's safe? I haven't seen anything that would indicate this, but I thought, "If anyone'd know, the TFL crew would!"
2) Does anybody know the legal barrel/legal OVERALL lengths for Texas? I'm thinking it's 18"/24", but I don't want to go to jail over inches.
3) Finally, is there a minimum operable length for this gun's barrel? I mean, is there a point at which the reliability of the gun will be hurt if I take the barrel too short? I can't imagine that that it'd need to be longer than the minimum legal length, but again...see question 1.
That's about it. The only other thing I wonder is: would this be an okay project for the new, at-home gunsmith? Or is it such an intricate operation (i.e., is there more to this than sawing the barrel down, cleaning up the edge, and maybe putting a touch of a crown on it?) that it should only be undertaken by a pro?
TIA for any input, guys.
Kal
I've had a Remington Sportsman 48 that I inherited from my dad, sitting in my gun cabinet for several years. It's been gathering dust, since I don't hunt with it, or shoot skeet.
Anyway, I'm considering having the barrel cut down (it's something like 24" or so, with a Cutts Compensator and a Modified Choke stuck on the end--VERY end-heavy and points like a sledgehammer) to use it as a HD gun, and was wondering about several points:
1) Am I about to commit some heinous act against an as-yet-unknown-to-me treasure? I've come to grips with the sentimentality of it (I have other, more cherished guns from him, so this isn't an issue). Is this some rare piece, though, that should be in some collector's safe? I haven't seen anything that would indicate this, but I thought, "If anyone'd know, the TFL crew would!"
2) Does anybody know the legal barrel/legal OVERALL lengths for Texas? I'm thinking it's 18"/24", but I don't want to go to jail over inches.
3) Finally, is there a minimum operable length for this gun's barrel? I mean, is there a point at which the reliability of the gun will be hurt if I take the barrel too short? I can't imagine that that it'd need to be longer than the minimum legal length, but again...see question 1.
That's about it. The only other thing I wonder is: would this be an okay project for the new, at-home gunsmith? Or is it such an intricate operation (i.e., is there more to this than sawing the barrel down, cleaning up the edge, and maybe putting a touch of a crown on it?) that it should only be undertaken by a pro?
TIA for any input, guys.
Kal