The ''American Brownings'' that Remington manufactured for them during WW2 had the magazine cut-off, but only the Browning guns! I have several of these; Browning Auto-5's (Standard & Sweet Sixteens - Belgium, Japanese & New Model; 5 & 3 shot) Remington 11 (5-shot & Sportsman 3-shot) and Savage 720; 5-shot & 726 Upland Sporter 3-shot. All of mine are 16 ga. except 1- 20 ga. Magnum and a Model 11- 12 ga.These are great guns and that's a fine example you have there! 👍🙂
I have one like what you are showing; take down port towards front, 1st style safety, 2nd style bolt latch, square top, round lower cartridge port, curved trigger, plain carrier button, only 1 locking screw (on front trigger housing pin), Remington UMC stamp. Serial# 1386** Not sure but i thought around 1911? maybe older. Belonged to my g-grandfather, I think he bought it new. I need the front screw on the rt where the shell tube screws in. Not sure what it does?
@@kabuti2839 That screw I believe is supposed to keep the magazine tube from unscrewing and getting loose in the receiver. If your shotgun is stamped Remington UMC then it is a Model 11. Pre-model 11 only had the markings on the LH side of the receiver or on the top of the barrel. Your model should also have the larger carrier button, it will be plain but larger in size compared to the early models.
@ironspringoutdoors serial 138,6** Tried to look it up once & figured it was made around 1911. The UMC stamp is behind the trigger under the stock. Thank you!
@@Olmanstrength I do not. Most replacements are for the newer late production model 11. My best advice would be to find a Browning Auto 5 stock with the rounded pistol grip.
The ''American Brownings'' that Remington manufactured for them during WW2 had the magazine cut-off, but only the Browning guns! I have several of these; Browning Auto-5's (Standard & Sweet Sixteens - Belgium, Japanese & New Model; 5 & 3 shot) Remington 11 (5-shot & Sportsman 3-shot) and Savage 720; 5-shot & 726 Upland Sporter 3-shot. All of mine are 16 ga. except 1- 20 ga. Magnum and a Model 11- 12 ga.These are great guns and that's a fine example you have there! 👍🙂
Good video. I shared it on my Remington Model 11 facebook page.
@@35rem19 Thanks!
I have one like what you are showing; take down port towards front, 1st style safety, 2nd style bolt latch, square top, round lower cartridge port, curved trigger, plain carrier button, only 1 locking screw (on front trigger housing pin), Remington UMC stamp. Serial# 1386** Not sure but i thought around 1911? maybe older. Belonged to my g-grandfather, I think he bought it new. I need the front screw on the rt where the shell tube screws in. Not sure what it does?
@@kabuti2839 That screw I believe is supposed to keep the magazine tube from unscrewing and getting loose in the receiver. If your shotgun is stamped Remington UMC then it is a Model 11. Pre-model 11 only had the markings on the LH side of the receiver or on the top of the barrel. Your model should also have the larger carrier button, it will be plain but larger in size compared to the early models.
@ironspringoutdoors serial 138,6** Tried to look it up once & figured it was made around 1911. The UMC stamp is behind the trigger under the stock. Thank you!
Any idea where i can order a "parts kit" for one of these? I have one thats all beat up, I believe it was made in 1911 if that helps
@@piehater65 Not that I am aware of. Most of the time springs and such are for the Browning Auto 5 are interchangeable. But hard parts are not.
@@ironspringoutdoorsLook up Art's gunsmithing. I just got a spring replacement kit from them & they have UA-cam channel w tutorials
Art's Gun Shop in MO makes rebuild kits for these.
Also, MGW and Numerick Arrns have various parts for these still.
Nice video. Know of any good sites to get a replacement butt stock for one of these?
@@Olmanstrength I do not. Most replacements are for the newer late production model 11. My best advice would be to find a Browning Auto 5 stock with the rounded pistol grip.
eBay