There should be a screw or release lever under the forearm of the gun. Once you release that you should be able to remove the barrel.
Pull on the front of the forearm it will come apart from the barrels......then break open the shotgun (like you were going to load it and the barrels will come apart from the reciever.
You should seek the services of a gunsmith and ask for help
Usually you fire the right barrel first. It's choke is normally a little open giving a wider spread of shot. You fire the second barrel which is normally a tighter choke at a target farther away. This tighter spread will be concentrated but spread because of the long range assuring more pellets hitting the target. Firing the right barrel at a greater range might have the target escape by having the shot pass by without hitting it because the pellets are spread too far apart.
you are only suposed to shoot magnums in semi because in long rifle they jam regularly and require tacking the gun apart and unjaming it.
because it does
belived to be a German barrel do not heat when blueing due to back then barrels were sodered together not welded if overheated they will split apart.
NO!!! modern powder is slow burning as compared to black powder and produces to much pressure for that type of steel process (Damascus is folded in the manufacturing process therefore laminated) and will cause the barrel to come apart which is like having a bomb in your hands
Which one?
Best left to a gunsmith
To take apart the Gecado .25 caliber rifle, you will begin by making sure that the rifle is not loaded. Remove the retaining pin at the base of the barrel and remove the barrel.
To take it apart you have to unscrew all the screws on one of the sides and it should come apart.
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