you have to have the ranger or ranger akimbo and try to fire both barrels at the same time. its more easier with a single one and fire for the head and if u get it u get da elmblem. so u get a head shot of both barrels
Browning barrels will not work in Remington or Savage, and vice versa. The big stumbling block is the ejector. On the Remington and Savage the ejector is a single hook brazed to the rear of the barrel extension. On the Browning the ejector is a pair of hooks. The bolts of each are slotted to fit their proper ejector. The wrong barrel won't clear the bolt and the ejector will get hammered if you try. Barrels of the Remington and Savage shotguns have a limited potential to be interchangeable, due to the shell stop cam cuts. The cam cuts are beveled notches on the exterior of the barrel extension. They work the cartridge stop that prevents a second shell from feeding out of the magazine. Slight variations of dimensions through the decades allows some barrels to work in both models. Like I said, "some". Most do not. The only way to be sure is to try it. Frist, try feeding dummy rounds, and if that works then test fire. The best idea is to buy the correct barrel for your gun. Information from Gunsmithing: Shotguns, by Sweeney.
Remington 700's are center fire rifles. Remington does make a very good 12 guage shot gun called the 870 (pump) and the 1100 (auto)- those are the popular ones i have both
Remington
Bernard Cyril Remington has written: 'Dictionary of fire insurance' -- subject- s -: Dictionaries, Fire Insurance
6 barrels the reason for this is so that the weapon can fire a sustained rate of fire without overheating the gun. the barrels spin keeping the weapon cooler than a single barrel weapon. this weapon can fire roughly 50 r/pm with relative accuracy
It has been a while, but if you load up both barrels you can either shoot one or both barrels. I don't remember exactly but you should be able to pull the front one back hard and shoot both or just the back one to shot the one barrel. If that isn't happening then you have a problem.
Multiple barrels arranged around a common center, barrels turn around that center as they fire.
If you have a prehensile trigger finger and an exquisite sense of timing, you might be able to pull off such a stunt. If the gun is a 12 gauge, and both barrels fired at exactly the same instant, you would then be firing the equivalent of a 6 gauge. The recoil, of course, would be double that of a 12 gauge. You would probably have ample time to contemplate the wisdom of such a stunt from your seat on the ground. I have had an imported 20 gauge, very lightweight and with a steep drop to the stock, fire both barrels without consulting me once. As unpleasant as that experience was, I am sure that the same thing in a 12 gauge would be even more uncomfortable. Be careful what you ask for. First, the 311 is a SxS, not an O/U. And it's easy to fire both barrels at once by using two fingers. I've done it with my 16 gauge and it doesn't kick that bad.
There is a selector switch for the barrel you want. Not both barrels at the same time
Yes. Slug barrels have a different "Choke" then shot barrels that make them more accurate when firing slugs, but you can fire slugs with a stock 1200 barrel.
While the M4 Carbine is intended to fire a 5.56x45mm NATO round that is distinct from the .223 Remington, both are centerfire cartridges. So yes, the M4 Carbine is a centerfire rifle.