Ithaca Gun Company Service is excellent

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Micro

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I bought two sequentially numbered Ithaca Model 37s directly from Ithaca a few years ago. Serial numbers ####44 and ####45. This is the "new" Ithaca in Upper Sandusky, Ohio. One of them has a 24" rifled slug barrel (and a spare 28" vent rib barrel) and is my primary deer shotgun. The other sports a 26" vent rib barrel. I've shot them quite a bit and have been pleased with them. Both are chambered for 3" rounds.

The M37 with the slug barrel developed a timing issue, which was particularly apparent when cycling Hornady SST slug rounds through it. Occasionally, I would fire a round, cycle the action, and the next round would come out of the magazine and fall to the ground, not having been pickled up by the carrier. On a couple of occasions, it would double feed a round into the receiver and jam the gun, and I would have to push the second round back into the magazine.

Now, this isn't necessarily a quality issue. It's an issue inherent in the design. I've owned several M37s made by different Ithaca companies and occasionally it happened with those, too. Depending on the ammo. Other's have reported similar issues. And many of the Hornady shotgun shells I have are out of round, have rounded rims, and are different lengths than Federal and Remington 2 3/4" shells.

So I called Ithaca in Upper Sandusky. Told them what was happening. They asked me to send both guns in to be checked by their gunsmith. They sent me a prepaid shipping label. I boxed them up and sent them in. They were there less than one week before I got a notice that the work was complete. The gunsmith not only fixed the timing, put in new shell stop springs, and honed some parts, Ithaca installed a rear sling swivel stud on my slug gun at no charge. I told them I appreciated the quick turn around and was told in return that Ithaca immediately moves any warranty issue to the front of the service line, that they take pride in their product and stand by them. I got my shotguns back in factory boxes, along with a note telling me how to reset the timing should it happen again. They also work on previous Model 37s not made by them. Two M37, there and back in under 10 days.

That's how you run a gun company. And now I've added a new sling that isn't a butt cradle type.

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I have an old 37 that locks up when I shoot cheap ammo. Something about the steel base swelling. I Don't shoot clays with it but high brass field loads are a dream for grouse and pheasants. (If I ever see them)
 
The 37 is my favorite pump too. I understand that the current production guns are excellent quality but I’m a fan of the pre-55 models.

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that's interesting they put a rear sight on them. I took my Dad's old 37 from the early/mid 70s to the range this weeekend for the first time, after messing with it for a few years, and eventually having completely stripped and inspected and reassembled. Seemed all good, and it was used quite a bit back in the day, managed to hit an 8"steel gong at 50 yards on my first shot. Missed the next 2 and hit it again on the 4th shot. It is just an orange bead front sight, but apparently aligned perfectly, if you sit the circle of the bead just on the receiver in your view, the center of the bead is POI at 50 yards. I was honestly kind of amazed it worked, and always thought that sight arrangement was a bit suspect, but now I'm sold.
 
Most Ithaca slug guns have front and rear rifle type sights on them.

I believe the Deerslayer III has no barrel mounted sights.
 
I think I have a featherlight, shot a few slugs through the IC barrel with the front sight this past weekend. Have a cut barrel, legal length, with no front sight to be seen. Kind of wondering if this new place making the same firearm, would fit a sight onto my cyliner choke barrel, for a dedicated slug barrel .. hmmm
 
That sounds like great service. I assume you asked them to install the swivel?

I had an older 37 fixed choke that required a trip to the NY factory for hand fitted barrels to change. Mine was full choke, and sadly, went down the road.

Great gun for lefties.
 
An 8 shot Model 37DSPS was my first modern firearm. I still have it today.

It doesn't have a rear swivel and no ability to mount an optic. I'd like to purchase a new one to supplement it.

Too bad everything of interest to me (defensive shotguns) on their website shows "out of stock".
 
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