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| Forums10 Topics39,553 Posts562,671 Members14,593 |  | Most Online9,918Jul 28th, 2025
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Joined:  Nov 2003 Posts: 131 Sidelock |  
| OP   Sidelock 
 Joined:  Nov 2003 Posts: 131 | 
Where there any American made over/unders made in the late 1800s or early 1920s other than the Rem. 32? |  |  |  
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Joined:  Jan 2002 Posts: 127 Sidelock |  
|   Sidelock 
 Joined:  Jan 2002 Posts: 127 | 
Marlin made the Model 90.  I believe it came out about the same time the Remington Model 32 did or later.  Tom Mix, the silent cowboy actor, had one that was engraved for him.  I think Marlin quite making it around the late 50s. 
 Colin L. Kendall
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Joined:  Jan 2002 Posts: 5,950 Likes: 145 Sidelock |  
|   Sidelock 
 Joined:  Jan 2002 Posts: 5,950 Likes: 145 | 
The Browning Superposed and the Remington Model 32 were both reviewed in The American Rifleman during 1932.  The over/under Marlin made for Sears, aka the Marlin Model 90, appears in a November 1936 J.L. Galef catalogue, along with the Savage Models 420 and 430.  Earlier American over/unders were primarily handmade flint-lock or percussion guns, or breechloaders finished up by custom makers on European actions. |  |  |  
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Joined:  Nov 2005 Posts: 4,598 Sidelock |  
|   Sidelock 
 Joined:  Nov 2005 Posts: 4,598 | 
My bad. That was single barrel... |  |  |  
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Joined:  Dec 2001 Posts: 6,466 Likes: 345 Sidelock |  
|   Sidelock 
 Joined:  Dec 2001 Posts: 6,466 Likes: 345 | 
Fred Adolph had a variety of overunders in the teens, and had an unusual patented design for one, but he was never able to get it manufactured. Most of his guns were sourced from Europe.  Emil Flues made some overunders and I assume they were made in the 20s but I am not positive of that. |  |  |  
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Joined:  Nov 2005 Posts: 4,598 Sidelock |  
|   Sidelock 
 Joined:  Nov 2005 Posts: 4,598 |  |  |  |  
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Joined:  Dec 2001 Posts: 6,466 Likes: 345 Sidelock |  
|   Sidelock 
 Joined:  Dec 2001 Posts: 6,466 Likes: 345 | 
Raimey, I have pictures of a few Flues over/unders.  From these I cannot tell about the rib, although they have ventilated ribs of some sort. |  |  |  
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Joined:  Aug 2007 Posts: 12,109 Likes: 381 Sidelock |  
|   Sidelock 
 Joined:  Aug 2007 Posts: 12,109 Likes: 381 | 
Fred Adolph had a variety of overunders in the teens, and had an unusual patented design for one, but he was never able to get it manufactured. Most of his guns were sourced from Europe.  Emil Flues made some overunders and I assume they were made in the 20s but I am not positive of that.   Mr. Hallquist:  You've piqued my interest with the Adolph patented design.  I've read of a Fred Adolph lumpless/lugless design(not patented??) with side bearing surfaces and I guess something close would be that of Robert Schrader without the lumps.  It appears that the idea was transferred or ran parallel with the Russian inventors, Nikolai I. Korovyakov & V.P. Ochnev, of the TOZ-34:  http://www.tulatoz.ru/en/toz34.html The Fred Adolph design had a top lifter lever similar to that of the Powell lifter action that I think pushed a locking rod into the tubeset.   Did Fred Adolph work a stint at Ithaca before he took the train to his jumping off spot?  Info has surfaced that Flues was involved in some bolt guns?? Kind Regards, Raimey rse |  |  |  
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Joined:  Aug 2007 Posts: 12,109 Likes: 381 Sidelock |  
|   Sidelock 
 Joined:  Aug 2007 Posts: 12,109 Likes: 381 | 
 http://www.stevebarnettfineguns.com/frm_inventory1.htm  in 20 bore category. I wonder what the proofmarks show.  It might be Merkel, Heym 132 or possibly an Adamy. There's some story to be told of all involved, or not involved, like how integrated were Adolf, Flues, Kornbrath, Newton, Owen, etc. There were sourcing lines established to Germany for weapons by someone in these circle. I wonder what year it was finished and how much effort was applied by Robert Griffith Owen. Kind Regards, Raimey rse |  |  |  
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