Retiredatforty
New member
OK, folks. Need your advice, here...
My father-in-law gave me his old shotgun over Thanksgiving. It's a 16-gauge Mossberg 190; a bolt-action (!) shotgun with two-shell magazine and something called a "C-LECT-CHOKE" at the muzzle, which is a screw-type choke selector. Turning the thing clockwise tightens up some vanes, and adjusts the choke. Markings on the barrel show "I CYL", "MOD" and "FULL" as options; obviously standard chokes. Best I can tell, this thing was made sometime in the late 1950s. He used to use it for hunting rabbits, pheasants and squirrels, but hasn't taken it out of the closet since about 1979.
I broke it down as completely as I felt comfortable with. Removed the stock, pulled out the bolt, and thoroughly cleaned and lubricated everything I could reach. I feel pretty good about it, and would like to shoot it this Thursday. The question is...should I? Beyond cleaning and lubricating it and checking its basic function (which best I can tell, is functioning normally), is there anything else I should do? Should I have a gunsmith look at it first? What, if any, are the risks of shooting something like this that hasn't been fired in 3 decades?
By the way, he gave me two boxes of shells, too. One of them says "CANUCK STANDARD LOAD 16 Gauge 2 3/4 inch; 7 1/2" the other box is a box of slugs, and are German. They're cardboard shells, and say "AUERHAHN Rauchlos" on the face of each of them. Along the edge, they say "SINOXID DYNAMIT-NOBEL-NURNBERG MADE IN WESTERN GERMANY" Should I use this old ammunition? It probably dates back to at least the 1970s. My inclination is to say "no" and fire only new stuff. Any opinions?
My father-in-law gave me his old shotgun over Thanksgiving. It's a 16-gauge Mossberg 190; a bolt-action (!) shotgun with two-shell magazine and something called a "C-LECT-CHOKE" at the muzzle, which is a screw-type choke selector. Turning the thing clockwise tightens up some vanes, and adjusts the choke. Markings on the barrel show "I CYL", "MOD" and "FULL" as options; obviously standard chokes. Best I can tell, this thing was made sometime in the late 1950s. He used to use it for hunting rabbits, pheasants and squirrels, but hasn't taken it out of the closet since about 1979.
I broke it down as completely as I felt comfortable with. Removed the stock, pulled out the bolt, and thoroughly cleaned and lubricated everything I could reach. I feel pretty good about it, and would like to shoot it this Thursday. The question is...should I? Beyond cleaning and lubricating it and checking its basic function (which best I can tell, is functioning normally), is there anything else I should do? Should I have a gunsmith look at it first? What, if any, are the risks of shooting something like this that hasn't been fired in 3 decades?
By the way, he gave me two boxes of shells, too. One of them says "CANUCK STANDARD LOAD 16 Gauge 2 3/4 inch; 7 1/2" the other box is a box of slugs, and are German. They're cardboard shells, and say "AUERHAHN Rauchlos" on the face of each of them. Along the edge, they say "SINOXID DYNAMIT-NOBEL-NURNBERG MADE IN WESTERN GERMANY" Should I use this old ammunition? It probably dates back to at least the 1970s. My inclination is to say "no" and fire only new stuff. Any opinions?