Browning Auto-5, anyone?

sigp220.45

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I only have this one - a 1963 light 12, made in Belgium of course.



It was my pheasant gun when I lived where pheasants did. Looks like we're moving to Colorado which may have some pheasants left.





I put the sling on it when I was training a pup. I kind of like it now, so it will most likely stay.



It kicks hard, is pretty heavy, and is overly complicated. I love it.

Once I ran through our shotgun qualification course with it for fun. It made those ugly 870s hang their stubby muzzles in shame.

Who else has one?
 
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I have had a few! Awesome guns! I have a solid rib 12ga. that is an early model. I stupidly sold a 1968 pristine 12 ga. magnum Belgium made some years back. Sold my 20ga. A5 also........The Winchester m12's and the Superposed get the field days now........
 
Had one back in my youth. 30" barrel and only hunted doves w/shotgun. Couldn't hit jack with it. Once missed a dove sittin on a power line. Traded it in on a Win. 1300. Been kickin' my own arse for the past 25 yrs.
 
A5s

I have 3(all Belgian). A std.weight 12 w/ improved cyl.,A 3"Mag w/28" full,and a Lt.20 with Imp. Cyl. I bought a Jap3" barrel with Invectors for the Mag so I can shoot steel shot. I can align the old humpback better than a tapered (a la Rem 1100) shotgun. john
 
I have a light 12 in a hard case that was made in 1953. I bought it from a lady who inherited it and didn't want it. She said it came from a relative who used it once. The gun is in new/pristine condition.
Jim
 
I did many morning along the Platte in the Denver area with an A-5. I had a full choke 32" bbl that is actually about 31.5".......Loved it except when I had directly overhead shots.......OH MAMA!!!! My favorite shells are 2 3/4" Mags for more than chukar, grouse, or pheasants. Some of the tough SoDak pheasants were in need of the 2 3/4" mags also. JMB sure was something!!!
 
Me Two!

Yeah, I owned two of these fine guns. My first was a Standard 12, to which I eventually added a Browning "Buck-Special" barrel as the gun was used primarily for deer hunting in shotgun-only county.

I also had a light 20 with ventilated rib that I bought for a song.

Sorry to say that both Brownings are no longer with me. The buck special was replaced by a Rem. 1100 with a Hastings rifled barrel and the light 20 fell to a Browning 20 gauge Citori, over-under.
 
Forty-five years ago I was given a gorgeous, brand-new Belgian-built Light Twenty with a 28" vent-rib modified barrel. I loved it, although I've always been a side-by-side double guy. I actually shot a little better on doves with a little Stevens 311 20 gauge, but the Browning was very sweet.

In my drinking days I sold it. One of countless stupid things I did when drunk. Still berate myself for that one.
 
I, too, had a Buck Special, bought new in late 1970, probably (from serial number) made in 1967. As many of you probably know, the Buck Special barrel is about an Improved Modified. Used it a little when I fell in with a skeet-shooting crowd, but never really got into scattergunning.

Great gun, and the manual of arms is certainly friendly to anyone who is familiar with a 1911 and desires to operate safely on a skeet range.

Mine also proved rather accurate with slugs, at least Brennekes.
 
I did many morning along the Platte in the Denver area with an A-5. I had a full choke 32" bbl that is actually about 31.5".......Loved it except when I had directly overhead shots.......OH MAMA!!!! JMB sure was something!!!

His genius is shown by what appears to me to be an avoidance of the laws of physics. You have a "set" amount of recoil from a shotgun shell going off, for example with a Citori, straight back into your shoulder. No action is cycled, no gas escapes.

With the Auto 5, the recoil is MAGNIFIED (many times it seems) that of a standard double of the same or LESS weight kicking you like an army mule in a bad mood! Generally you get the benefit of weight, or an action cycling, or somthing to help you with recoil. Not with the Auto 5. It takes a fixed amount of recoil and doubles or triples it! Now that is genuis!

(My grandfather always said it was to see if you were "man enough" to start hunting. Because if you could stand the recoil, you were ready!).
 
I too have three. A very early 12a., (1929 or '30), a Light 12, and a 26" barreled Sweet 16. And an old Remington Model 11 in 20ga.

To those that are getting kicked too hard, your either set up wrong, or lubing too much.
 
Just one, a plain field grade made in 1933. No engraving on them then,,safety inside the trigger guard. Just a nice classic FN. Thought I should own at least one semiauto shotgun before I leave, so I bought this one. Fun to shoot. Full choke is perfect for skeet and S/C's

I don't believe they recoil any 'harder' than any other recoil op gun of the same weight and stock dimentions. There's a lot more going on with each shot as far as parts moving around than a gas-op, that's for sure.
They need a minimum velocity/shot weight combination to get enough energy going in the other direction to overcome the recoil spring and however the friction rings have been set up. Like any semiauto, the hammer spring and the bolt return spring all play into it also.

My Dad had a Rem Sportsman 48 with about the same long recoil system in it. My brother bought an 1100 new in '63 (still has it & the 48!) The recoil difference between the two systems is noticably different with the same ammo however.
I shoot some pretty soft handloads in my FN A-5. They just barely work the action. They work in bro's 1100, but no go in the 1953 built Sportsman 48.
It's all good,,all fun.
 
I have 2. My deer gun(dogging) is a 12 ga. lt. wt. with a 22" invector barrel. I put Ramline plastic stocks on it(to keep the wood damage to a minimum) and and a homemade 2 shot extension. Have killed a boxcar load of deer with it. Second one my kids gave me a NIB from 1994 20 ga with 28" invector barrel for my retirement back in Feb. 2014. It has become my dove gun. These and my 2 ea mdl. 12's are all the shotguns a feller ever needs.
 
My Dad has a Light Twelve with the plain barrel and Modified choke that he bought from a Western Auto in Detroit new in 1953. 28" barrel; perfect for pheasant hunting in Michigan in the winter. He still has the original owner's book and wooden plug that came with it. The gun itself is absolutely flawless, with perfect bluing and beautiful wood; not a scratch to be seen anywhere. The only wear at all is the electroplate is wore off the face of the gold trigger it came with. Amazing to me; he hunted pheasant from 1953 until the late Sixties, when him and Mom got married. I suppose I can chalk the condition up to his OCD, and being a tool & die maker. EVERYTHING he owns is flawless, lol! I have never shot this gun, and don't think it's been shot in thirty years or so. Dad's almost 85 now; wish we could find us a place to get out and shoot that old mule; we live in town, and it's hard to do.
 
I have a sweet sixteen have shot rabbits, pheasant,duck and deer. SWEET
and a couple skunk.
 
Beautiful!
I have a Remington 11 and a Savage 720, both variations on the same theme and they shouldn't kick too hard as long as the recoil system is set up correctly and isn't over lubed.
 

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