If your Browning auto-5 shotgun is chambered in 12 gauge then it was made in the year 1928.If it is chambered in 16 gauge,then it was made in the year 1938.
If your Browning auto-5 shotgun is chambered in 12 gauge,then it was made in the year 1928.If it is chambered in 16 gauge,then it was made in the year 1938.
If your shotgun is chambered in 12 gauge,then your shotgun was made in the year 1913.If your shotgun is a 16 gauge model,then it was made in the year 1926.
If your shotgun is chambered in 12 gauge,then it was made in the year 1929.
Seeing that you did not state what gauge your shotgun is in,the Browning auto-5 shotgun chambered in 12 gauge with the serial number 49322 was made in 1921,if you have a 16 gauge model auto-5 shotgun then it was made in the year 1926.
The prefix of 72G indicates that you have a Browning auto-5 light weight shotgun that was made in the year 1972.It is chambered in 12 gauge.
No, the gun is either chambered for one gauge or the other.
The prefix of 72G indicates that you have a Browning auto-5 light weight shotgun that was made in the year 1972.It is chambered in 12 gauge.
If your auto-5 Browning shotgun is chambered in 12 gauge,then it was made in the year 1924.If you happen to have a 16 gauge model auto-5 shotgun,then it was made in the year 1928.
1912
12-70 is frequently used to indicate the gauge of the shotgun followed by the length of the chamber in millimeters. In the US, or non-metric measurements, that means a 12 gauge shotgun chambered for 2.75 inch (usually read two and three quarter inch) shells. Sometimes, you'll see 12-76 to designate a 12 gauge shotgun chambered for 3 inch shells.
The 20-gauge shell will fall into the barrel and lodge. When a properly fitting 12-gauge shell is chambered and fired, it will blow up the barrel and you will have a very bad day.