Over/unders are tight to begin with if made correctly. It will get eaiser as you use it.
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.
Break open.
depending on the make, age,and condition that shotgun could be worth nothing up to $3000.
With a break open shotgun, the part of the gun frame that is hidden by the closed barrels.
The Remington 90-t is a 12 gauge, single shot, break open, trap shotgun
No published sn data
I'm guessing it is a single shot break open shotgun with an exposed hammer. Made sometime after 1900 and worth $50-$100 depending on condition.
No you won't break a 12 gauge shotgun if you only do it once or twice. If you flick a shotgun's action open or closed to often. You can {1} loose other nut's & screw's that are holding different part's on to the shotgun. But {2} in most cases you will end up with a very loose front hinge pin. And that loose hinge pin causes both of the barrel's to become misaligned with the shotgun's frame. Making it harder for you or anybody else to close the shotgun.
Yes, I have had shells from all my guns hit me in the face, from time to time. It depends on the type of gun. If it is a shotgun, it is less likely unless it is a break open type. But if you get hit with ones from a break open, that's all your fault.
Pull down on forearm. It should come off. Then break open shotgun, barrels should hinge off.
Burn it!
double barrel shotgun