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Longthorne Hesketh shotgun review

Longthorne Hesketh shotgun review: An English over-under with barrels made from a single piece of steel has a bright future.

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Time Well Spent
Time Well Spent June 15, 2011

Longthorne Hesketh shotgun review.
An English over-under with barrels made from a single piece of steel has a bright future. And at less than £13,000.

Occasionally we have the chance to test something that stands far apart from the mass; the Longthorne Hesketh is such a gun.

It is a new English sidelock over-under.

First impressions are generally good. It has a highly polished, lightly engraved action, 30in barrels, and a semi-pistol stock with open radius grip.

It weighs slightly less than 7lb ? light for a modern over-under 12-bore.

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The gun is extraordinary in a number of ways. Its price is set below that of any other home-grown sidelock. 
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Most intriguingly, the barrels are made from a single piece of alloy steel by an entirely new process. The method of action engraving is also hi-tech based. 
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First handling impressions are positive, too. 
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The Hesketh is lively and the stock shapes are ergonomically efficient. Aesthetically, the front of 
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the fore-end could be improved. 
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The fore-end has an Anson-style button release catch which is appropriate but it might have looked better with a metal cap. 
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