The link below may answer your question http://wiki.answers.com/Q/What_is_the_value_of_a_Browning_Sweet_Sixteen
The Browning Sweet 16 is a 16 gauge shotgun manufactured in Belgium. It uses a true 16 gauge barrel and as such is a wonderful shotgun. To a hunter this is a sweet weapon.
Although both are interchangeable, a true Sweet 16 barrel will have three holes drilled through the barrel band. This was one of the ways Browning lightened the barrel. The rib will also be a smidge thinner than on a regular barrel.
It is 1959 production. True 'Sweet Sixteen' shotguns are very desirable and heavily collected. It's all about condition. Beater-grade guns with rust/pitting and damaged wood will only bring -maybe- $350, but minty-condition Sweet Sixteen guns with factory ventilated ribs and no aftermarket modifications will reliably bring well over $1000. sales@countrygunsmith.net
true! it is sweet
By the serial number.
I don't know if it is true but it is what older people say, that it creates toxins in our body- I don't know what a doctor would say to that!
i have you couldn't until you are 17 years of age. is that true.
There are exactly 23 billion tons of sweet tarts candy manufactured in a year. Did you know that sweet tarts were invented by J. Fish Smith? Did you know that lemon used to be one of the many flavors for sweet tarts but, in 2001 the flavor lemon was excluded and was to never sold again?! These are all true facts!
No it is not true. All Sweet 16's had a gold trigger from the first year in 1937 when made available to the public. For starters, do you have a Sweet 16? Not all Browning 16 ga Auto 5's are Sweet 16's. Just as many standard weight 16 ga guns were made in that era as the Sweet version. A 1948 gun may have or may not have the "scripted words "Sweet 16" on the left side of the receiver. If the barrel sn matches the receiver and the barrel band has 3 holes in it, then it's a Sweet 16. Perhaps the reference about standard in 1952 is the fact that the cross bolt safety wasn't standard until 1952. Auto 5's had the front trigger safety until 1952, but there are a few exceptions between 1951 and 1953. FN still produced some Auto 5's with front trigger safeties into the 1960's for markets outside the US and Browning. Browning converted many front trigger safeties to cross bolt safeties at their shop in St. Louis. It's possible that if you have a Sweet 16 made in 48 and your safety is a cross bolt, then that would explain the blued metal trigger.
If Only a Sweet Surrender to the Nights to Come Be True was created on 2003-05-20.
In most cases yes! They dont want their owners to be upset over them. How sweet!
if they were born blind there really is nothing you can do. they won't know what red looks like or what's round........ ..that is not true, a blind person can know round by touch, they can know crisp and sweet by taste, sweet by smell, they can feel the smooth skin with a stalk at one end, and the blossom end at the other....