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All that is tactical is not necessarily new...and this shotgun is a perfect example. It was put together by a Tucson police officer in the late 1940s or early 1950s, and has all the elements of a very modern "tactical" combat shotgun. It is a Remington Model 11 semiauto shotgun (a licensed copy of the Browning Auto-5). It is fitted with a Parsons 2-round magazine extension (for a total of 7+1 capacity), a barrel from a Remington 11R (20" cylinder choke) and a Nydar Model 47 reflex sight.

That Nydar sight is a really cool example of an early optical sight, developed form aircraft gunnery sights used during World War Two. It uses no batteries, and reflects an aiming circle into a large front lens. By modern standards it is a pretty dim reticle, but it was absolutely state of the art in the late 1940s, and allowed the same sort of rapid both-eyes-open shooting that modern red dot sights do.

Thanks to Bear Arms in Scottsdale AZ for access to this very cool shotgun!

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Ye Olde Tactical: A Vintage Riot Shotgun w/ Nydar 47 Optic (ad-free)

https://utreon.com/c/forgottenweapons/ http://www.patreon.com/ForgottenWeapons http://www.floatplane.com/channel/ForgottenWeapons Cool Forgotten Weapons merch! http://shop.forgottenweapons.com All that is tactical is not necessarily new...and this shotgun is a perfect example. It was put together by a Tucson police officer in the late 1940s or early 1950s, and has all the elements of a very modern "tactical" combat shotgun. It is a Remington Model 11 semiauto shotgun (a licensed copy of the Browning Auto-5). It is fitted with a Parsons 2-round magazine extension (for a total of 7+1 capacity), a barrel from a Remington 11R (20" cylinder choke) and a Nydar Model 47 reflex sight. That Nydar sight is a really cool example of an early optical sight, developed form aircraft gunnery sights used during World War Two. It uses no batteries, and reflects an aiming circle into a large front lens. By modern standards it is a pretty dim reticle, but it was absolutely state of the art in the late 1940s, and allowed the same sort of rapid both-eyes-open shooting that modern red dot sights do. Thanks to the Bear Arms Reference Collection in Scottsdale AZ for access to this very cool shotgun! Contact: Forgotten Weapons 6281 N. Oracle 36270 Tucson, AZ 85740

Comments

EyeBall

Now that you mention 1940's aircraft sights, I can certainly see that in this sight, as well as in my modern red dots.

Wayne S.

Pretty cool setup. I wonder if that officer had a Fitz Special for a BUG.

ViejoLobo

It was a common upgrade to install an Auto 5 "two piece" lifter into the Remington 11. Sometimes it require(s) fitting, sometimes not.

Anonymous

Very cool piece of firearms and law enforcement history. I assume that you could load 7 rounds and then top it off for 7 +1 like we do today. But unlike most if not all of the extension tubes today, the add-on feature is a great idea. Although you would need a longer spring.

Anonymous

Kurt @ Bear Arms keeps telling me he doesn't much like shotguns, but man, he's got some nice fighting gauges in that reference collection...

Guido Schriewer

never saw longer mag tube let alone less than 24 or 26in barrels over here. the rem11 rather auto5 is pretty much the only semi shotgun I'd really want. cannot beat that level of cool.

Fruitbat44

Really interesting bit of kit. Tactical, not tacticool.