TRowe wrote on Apr 20
th, 2021 at 9:29pm:
I have a copy of a letter in which Fred Ross states that the factory turned down to order for full Stevens Pope outfits. It was dated Jan. 1911. Also he was only working part time. I don't believe the Krag barrels had their on serial number range. They did have their own stamp "Stevens Pope" and didn't have the Stevens A&T like you see on most Pope barrels. The highest SP number observed is 1964 and it was a barrel only found in the estate of an old time shooter.
This is quite helpful, but, as usual with anything Stevens, leaves me with another bunch of questions.
"Fred Ross wrote that the factory "turned down to order" for full Stevens-Pope outfits.
Does
outfits mean barrels?
Was there a single size (length, diameter, weight) for a "standard" Stevens-Pope barrel? The photo is of Terry Buffum's Stevens-Pope rifle. It is a .22 Short, gain twist, with a 44 1/2 action (2-digit SN). The S-P barrel is about like a Winchester #3 in weight. The S-P barrel number is higher than the cutoff number for Pope's presence. I have misplaced the number, but IIRC, it is over 1800.
Was that a "standard" barrel? Were any of the S-P barrels heavier than the barrel in this photo?
Were any of the recorded S-P barrels round or half-octagon? Assuming that the S-P numbers started at 1 and that number 1964 is close to the end of the line, and that the line ran from early in 1901 until the end of 1907, that implies the
average production rate was about ONE barrel per day.
That's a few men running a few machines, each doing a different step in barrel manufacture. If Pope or Fred Ross was supervising such an operation, he would have been on the shop floor, not in an office. At the very least, they would have been looking over someone's shoulder.
I have recorded 9 SNs for S-P Krag barrels, with maybe another 3 or 4 that I have references to but not SNs.
How many non-Krag S-P barrels have survived? I'm trying to infer a survival rate.