Impossible to answer without a detailed description of all markings.
Brake barrel rifles are single shot rifles. After each shot you have to fold the barrel down (Break the barrel) in order to cock it again.
The forstock of the gun snaps off. There is no lever, you just pull it. Then break open the gun. The barrel then lifts out. You should now have three pieces: barrel, forstock and stock with trigger mechanism in place.
One of many types made by them
It is a single barrel, break-away 12 gauge shotgun.
@100 yrs
There is no "break in" shotgun. A "break open" shotgun is a single barrel, double barrel, or combination rifle/shotgun which breaks open in the sense that a lever will unlock the action, allowing the barrel to pivot at a hinge at the front of the receiver, pivoting the rear of the barrel up to expose the chamber. A shells may be loaded into the chamber and the barrel pivoted back to close the action. The act to "break in" a shotgun means to fire it a few times to loosen it up.
I have one like this with a big S on the butt plate and number 735 on the receiver i would also like to know it maker?
it is 114 =[)
Yes it is. It is a single shot .177 pellet rifle. It is not a BB rifle.
No. it is a single cock spring system. You only need to break the barrel once to cock it and fire it.
the range of the Nerf barrel break is 25-30 feet
Installing trigger guard in H&R Topper 88 single shot shotgun. I am not a professional gunsmith, so your mileage may vary, but this is how I _finally_ got it done. 1. The "trigger extension, the trigger, and the trigger guard have to all line up together, and line up with the pin holes in the receiver when the pin is inserted. It is next to impossible to get them to line up, and keep them lined up. Before in inserted the trigger guard into the receiver, I lined up the trigger, trigger extension, and trigger guard holes. Then I inserted two small splinters of wood from either side as shims and pushed them in tight until the holes stayed lined up. I cut the splinters off even with the outside of the trigger guard. After I inserted the trigger guard in the receiver, I got the trigger guard lined up with the pin hole in the receiver, then I hammered the pin through and drove out the wedges. 2. There are two opposing springs that fit in holes in the trigger guard. The rear one goes to the trigger. The front spring goes to the barrel break release. Leave the front spring out to start. Then after you get the trigger guard back in, you can hold the barrel break release up and drop the front of the trigger guard down just enough to insert the spring through from the front of the receiver.