by Demon of Undoing » Sat Feb 12, 2011 5:05 am
... intended to be a multipart series.
Ithaca Model 37 Airweight
The lightest 12 bore pump shotgun made before the widespread use of plastics. The stock was military grade wood ( more on that later) that I think was probably used even though lighter materials were available. They had to , or else it would have been nearly unshootable. That twelve I spoke of earlier , that would rearrange facial geometry ? Yeah , this is the one. All the internal metal parts were just thick enough to do the job , and they would indeed. It's also the most reliable twelve I ever owned. It held seven 2 3/4" rounds with one in the chamber. I seem to remember a crossbolt safety and bottom feed and eject , but was otherwise just like a Mossberg inside. If you were going to carry a significant shoulder arm into harm's way and wanted to get out as light as possible, with as good a shooting and carrying balance as could be had, for the cost of a pair of today's running shoes , this was it. Boy did you pay for it at the cheek and shoulder.
The 37 was widely used in Vietnam by point men , for a number of reasons. The relative ease of carrying the thing was appreciated in heavy brush. In addition to it's weight and balance , it was very slick , with only a bead front sight unlike the brush hook used as a front sight on the M-16. It was also known for a particular oddity to the trigger that I am pretty sure would make a modern lawyer have a digestive event. There was no trigger disconnect. If you held down the trigger and worked the slide like a madman , you could burn eight rounds in an amazingly short time. I have seen the thing fired fast enough that it was probably near the cyclic rate of Ma Deuce. This sort of foolishness would litterally butcher sections of brush , and the effect on the intended target was pretty impressive , too.
Fired from offshoulder/ high hip it was slower but it was still done in those days before point shooting was completely discredited by people that never heard of Bill Jordan. A practiced man can fire as accurately from the hip at fighting ranges as from the shoulder. You can't do that sort of thing until you can. You don't learn it , you experience it. The Ithaca was excellent for that very thing. Plus , firing it like that didn't leave you looking like you had just been thrown out of an Olongapo bar.
A notable modification was made by the SEAL teams in Vietnam - the duckbill. The idea was to string the pellets in a horizontal spread. This gave tremendous close in firepower , as it really did become a jungle ( well , Delta ) broom. Chief Watson , a man that I could not outdrink though I had 40 years' youth on him, loved the thing for just that reason. I don't know if he personally used it so , but I do know that at least one greenface cut the stock down and used a section of OD line as a sling , in a high chest carry , but also carried a CAR. He didn't carry any spare rounds- it was there entirely to break contact or spring an ultra close ambush , one massive series of blasts that would loosen the sinuses. Two buckshot rounds at ten feet made a rathole in a pig big enough to put two fists in. I can hardly imagine eight. Note to those that have ears , the pig went down for the same reason the goats did in Panama.
I have no memory of what happened to that piece. Probably left it at somebody's house for safekeeping and never went back. It was by modern standards a cheap POS , though with the extended magazine and Parkerization it was all business. But you can't carry the thing and look all tactically erogenous. Not enough plastic , no black , no rail , no place to charge your cell phone. It just worked , really well , very cheaply. That used to be a good thing , stuff being cheap and simple of purpose. Now its all about the features and accessories.
Oy. This is what I mean about feeling considerably older than I am. After that last paragraph , I feel like I need to put on a yellow fedora and some Sansabelts .
Don't know what it is, but I'm agin'it.