7 shells on a 13 inch barrel? Interesting. The ability to have the strength (of receiver) of a single shot action on a repeater? Also very interesting. Wonder what kind of hellishiously over-loaded rounds you could put through this thing.
I watched the forgotten weapons video about this and was really amazed by the original piece. I commented on that video that I would love to see it being reproduced in modern materials with modern machinery. I'm glad it went real and hope it gets successful in sales. Love the retro-futurist vibes that is has. Would like to have one myself, but I live in Brazil, so I'm fucked up.
@@scottie1858 I also realized that it actually does fill a very niche role if you want a something like a pump action that can be folded to be extremely compact. Only one alternative which its that one folding pump action that doesn't seem very sturdy imo
From what I understand they realized this old design is treated as a single shot shotgun by the Australian legal system so is much easier to get than other repeating shotguns
I have seen this system on Forgotten Weapons, and also C&Rsenal. Looks like it will work well with modern materials and workmanship. I think I want one... LOL Thanks for the video!
Dolum YAPARKEN magazine Yanlış tarafa mekanizmayı çeviriyor. Sola değil, sağ tarafa yani namlu tarafına çevirip magazini doldurması lazım. İki elini kullanmasına gerek kalmayacak 😁. Çünkü zaman oradaki tırnak magazinde diğer fişeğin çıkmasını engelleyecek.
You need to open it fast so that the shell is propelled backwards at a higher speed. When you open it slow, the ejector mechanism is slowly released until it's cleared from the frame of the gun. The faster you open the barrel, the more speed and velocity is attained to really fling that shell back into the loader lever. These were designed for rapid fire. If you're going to baby the action, you might as well just load the shells into the barrel one at a time by hand...
Your description of how the ejector works is incorrect. The ejector is the same strength regardless of how fast the action is opened. When the ejector release is tripped from the action having been opened a certain amount, the shell is expelled by the ejector through the sudden force of the ejector spring. This function (when opening the action) is independent from the frame. Your description is that of an extractor, not an ejector.
@@freedomfirearmscanada Did you notice the "malfunctions" happened when he slowly opened the barrel. The shells have enough mass to trigger it, even with the smaller brass (The larger brass shells will hit with more weight). You will get more acceleration from a faster barrel opening. Acceleration is the key here. I've seen plenty of break actions in videos, and fired a few in person, if you open hard; the shells go faster...
Cool, but when you have pumps and autos…… it’s like an idea that never really became anything. Only thing I can think is some countries are more restrictive and this circumvents . Like drillings in German lands. You could only own one gun, so they made multiple calibers. Now if this way on a combination rifle, maybe limited to two rounds… giving you a total of 3. Most hunting is limited in the mag. Plus cut down weight. Dream would be 20 gauge/.22mag combo with one of these loaders.
Hello, Curious about this idea- do you mean to keep a full length adapter in the tube ( say .22lr) and remove it when you want to run the 12 gauge shells using the tube mag mechanism? Ps I contacted tactical import 3 weeks ago regarding using .44 mag inserts in the sr -11, they are waiting to hear back from the factory for safety specs.
@@islandred3968 short lane adapters, x caliber adapters, etc. would be super easy to install and remove compared to with pump action 12 gauges. But unlike single shot shotguns, this can go back into repeatable mode in 12 gauge
love this gun.. fun to shoot... oh and your loading it wrong. your meant to put one in the chamber then flip the carrier over the chamber then feel the rounds in the tube. it has a spring loaded shell catch over the tube . saves having to hold the rounds in against the mag spring
Looks to me like it needs some oil or you need to polish up that mechanism. A couple of times when you went to move it with your finger it didn't flip that easily.
If the tube was detachable and exchangeable with another... that would actually turn the Alof conversion system from a novelty to a legitimate combat capable upgrade.
Hey, so here's this gun brand new in box that's never been oiled. Watch me shoot it and wonder why it doesn't work 100% 😐 Moving metal parts move a little more freely when you lubricate them my dude...
@@drewbs-dj7kqI don't know a single firearm comes oiled and ready to go. Gun oil and grease are two different things. Most guns come with grease on them because they can sit on shelves for a long time. Gun oil will dry up in that time.
أَفَرَأَيْتَ إِن مَّتَّعْنَاهُمْ سِنِينَ (٢٠٥) ثُمَّ جَاءَهُم مَّا كَانُوا يُوعَدُونَ (٢٠٦) مَا أَغْنَىٰ عَنْهُم مَّا كَانُوا يُمَتَّعُونَ (٢٠٧) الشعراء Then have you considered if We gave them enjoyment for years, And then there came to them that which they were promised? They would not be availed by the enjoyment with which they were provided. (Quran 26 :205-207)
When I first seen this Sulun Auslof shotgun.. I just knew I had to get one! I just placed my order for one in nickel finish just like the one in the video.. but I also opted for the optional mini shell adapter as well that allows you to shoot the mini shells. When these first came in.. they sold out pretty quick.. but now that they are back in stock I had to jump on the opportunity and not miss out on this very unique and historic style shotgun! I also have a Sulun Arms Tac-12 Benelli M4 clone that runs beautifully.. and Sulun also makes their brand of the HG-105 Bullpup 12ga which is another great product from Sulun.. but Sulun kinda dropped the ball on that SS-211 mini over under 12ga they came out with even though a lot of people still bought it up.. not me.. the moment I picked one up and felt that very short length of pull.. I knew it was just not for me.
I will be importing the 20" nickel models to the US. Starting a single import next week to make sure everything goes smoothly. Takes 3-4months to go through the import process, takes a lot of paperwork and the import cost is as much as the shotgun. Once I get one in, I'll order 5 to test the market. See if there is enough demand in the US market to justify the time, cost and effort. If there is, then I will probably import a dozen at a time.