Ithaca's once again producing "Riot Guns"


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Kenshin
October 23, 2006, 12:24 AM
Hadnt looked at their website in a while, looked at the firearms page, and wow.

Old news, but I gotta vent my joy.

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MatthewVanitas
October 24, 2006, 12:34 AM
Always good to see an American company rise from the ashes.

But what's the advantage of the M37 Riot Gun over, say a Rem or Mossy? Just curious, as I've never used an Ithaca.

EDIT: Oh, bottom ejection. That is kinda groovy. Is the safety ambidextrous as well? Any other upsides I'm missing? I'm not really a shotgun guy, but an M37 would be cool just to be contrary...

-MV

Skofnung
October 24, 2006, 01:09 AM
But what's the advantage of the M37 Riot Gun over, say a Rem or Mossy?

This is subjective, but I find that the Ithaca stock fits me like no other.

They are lighter in weight than the 870, and a little heavier than the Mossberg 500. This could be good or bad depending on your situation/recoil sensitivity.

They are fast. At least, all of the ones I've used or come into contact with have been faster cycling than any 870 or 500 that I've seen.

Dave McCracken
October 24, 2006, 09:27 AM
The 37 is a class act. Based on a JMB design, it was purpose built as a lightweight upland tool. It morphed into a "Serious" shotgun during WWII, when GIs found it excellent for jungle warfare.

Later, when the Deerslayer variant with a barrel bored for best work with slugs turned out to handle buck, the Riot versions became popular with the LAPD and point men in Nam.

It shucks slickly, is as fragile as a crowbar and keeps on ticking.

Downsides.....

The machining and close tolerances involved means it costs a bit more.

The design is a bit harder to get into for deep cleaning.

On the trap range, the techniques for loading it are more complex than other pumps, and it's harder to see if the action's open.

I'm glad to see these made again. Good shotguns....

MatthewVanitas
October 24, 2006, 10:23 AM
http://www.ithacagunsusa.com/images/riotandLEcatalog800.jpg

They do look pretty spiff.

-MV

Wags
October 24, 2006, 10:47 AM
I saw these earlier last week. Makes me wonder: Do I buy a new Ithaca Riot Package, or order a new 18.5" barrel from Sharps Gun Supply in Canada and have it fitted since my 12ga was made in 1957? This gives me an after the first of year project to consider. I'm still pretty much a purist with the 2.75" chamber length preferred since I've neve fired a Ithaca with 3.0" chamber. Beautiful looking working tool that is a classic! I'm suck a sucker for Ithaca Classics...........

Wags

ryoushi
October 24, 2006, 04:16 PM
I'm gonna get me one of those. It's funny how some guns seem to have "soul" and that M37 Riot Gun surely does.

bowfin
October 25, 2006, 03:17 PM
With my apologies to the majority, the Ithaca Model 37 puts the Remington 870 and Mossberg 500 into the "also ran" category, as far as I am concerned.

I own one of each, and at various times, some of each. I certainly appreciate them all, but there is something about the Ithaca that seems solid and slick, something I never associated with the other two. I picked up my Ithaca 20 gauge and shot better at trap with it than I did the Remington 1100 and the Mossberg 935 12 gauges I had also brought out, even though I was throwing less lead.

Granted, just because I have a soft spot for the Ithacas doesn't mean you will, but it might be worth including them in the next "Which pump for me" thread.

Since the BPS is almost a M37 (maybe even an "improved' M37 with its top tang safety), it might garner the same devotion if I had ever owned one.

MillCreek
October 25, 2006, 03:24 PM
Since I am right handed and left eye dominant, I shoot long guns left handed. I appreciate the bottom ejection of my 37's.

bowfin
October 25, 2006, 03:34 PM
Unless I was hallucinating, Ithaca had a "Home Defense' model on their website that featured an eight shot tube and short barrel a month or so back. I wonder what happened with it?

At the risk of sounding like a broken record, they really, reallly, REALLY, need to resurrect the World War II Ithaca trench gun with the ventilated heatshield and bayonet lug. The originials can easily fetch on the far side of $10,000.

I can't find a picture of one, but they do look very businesslike, all dressed up for battle.

Gunner23
October 25, 2006, 04:36 PM
http://i79.photobucket.com/albums/j156/JBWALT420/trenchgun.jpg

Would that be the one? Very handsome weapon, thats for sure.

Carl N. Brown
October 25, 2006, 05:19 PM
For some strange reason, I like to see the WWII riot/trench 37s
and police riotguns with the pheasant hunting scene engraved in
the receiver.:D

Black_Talon
October 25, 2006, 08:56 PM
I can't find a picture of one, but they do look very businesslike, all dressed up for battle.

Here's mine. It's a 1965 that went to a PD in LA:
http://www.black-talon.org/RKBA/SG/M37_66_trench_900.jpg

Black_Talon
October 25, 2006, 08:58 PM
For some strange reason, I like to see the WWII riot/trench 37s
and police riotguns with the pheasant hunting scene engraved in
the receiver.

1977 "LAPD" style from a PD in OR:
http://www.black-talon.org/RKBA/SG/M37_DSPS_77_0900.jpg

kahr404life
October 25, 2006, 09:03 PM
Very nice!:)

MatthewVanitas
October 25, 2006, 10:10 PM
At the risk of sounding like a broken record, they really, reallly, REALLY, need to resurrect the World War II Ithaca trench gun with the ventilated heatshield and bayonet lug. The originials can easily fetch on the far side of $10,000.

Have you emailed Ithaca to ask them about it?

Some of these small American companies are incredibly responsive to customer emails.

I emailed Henry Repeating Arms with a question about spare parts for the Ithaca 72 (Henry predecessor) that we were shooting at the UT Austin range. The Pres. of the company emailed me back and said that a free rifle was on its way to our local FFL, and that he hoped the college kids would enjoy it.

If Ithaca writes back, I'm sure a lot of us would like to hear the answer. Couldn't hurt to ask, unless they send hired goons to break your Ithaca.

-MV

bowfin
October 26, 2006, 02:00 PM
Quote:
At the risk of sounding like a broken record, they really, reallly, REALLY, need to resurrect the World War II Ithaca trench gun with the ventilated heatshield and bayonet lug. The originials can easily fetch on the far side of $10,000.

Have you emailed Ithaca to ask them about it?

Yes, I have e-mailed and called several times, but they were still in the process of tooling up and getting the distribution pipeline filled up, and had their hands full. I thought I would give them a couple more months to get the standard models in the pipeline, and broach the subject again.

I wonder if they realize how rare and desirable the original trench guns (with the heatshield and bayonet lug) are. I think the woman who answered the phone was far more knowledgeable and intelligent than I dared hoped for in such a new company.

Yep, put that heatshield on, the bayonet lug with a long old M1917 bayonet, and an oiled leather sling, and you're ready to jump out of the Higgins boat and march right into the island jungle for an invigorating hike and a good night's rest...:D

c_yeager
October 26, 2006, 02:44 PM
Here's mine. It's a 1965 that went to a PD in LA:

I want a bayonet lug on my shotgun :(

bowfin
October 26, 2006, 05:12 PM
/*I want a bayonet lug on my shotgun*/

LOL, I think of one time turkey hunting I might have been glad to have it. Those "not quite dead" big gobblers cracking you across the bridge of the nose with their wings can smart!:)

I am not much for tactical/home defense/SHTF shotguns, but I would buy an Ithaca trenchgun in a heartbeat, for what reason, I don't know.

I DO have a reason for getting a new Ithaca 12 gauge with an improved cylinder barrel, which is to get a nicer shotgun than my 1100 Sportsman and Mossberg 500. It sure makes more sense than the trench gun pipe dream,

Audie
October 27, 2006, 03:57 PM
The riot length guns are fun to shoot...the balance is very nice. Will the new one have the slam fire feature???

I was thinking of an M97 riot for my next shotgun, but these look pretty nice....but I wonder if they will have the "new" safety features the old ones did not...or will they be exact copies?

Coronach
October 27, 2006, 04:07 PM
I have no need for one of these.

Just a whole lot of "want". :D

My wife's shotgun is a Ithaca 37 in 16g with 18" and a 26" (IIRC) bbls. She shoots it rather well in point-blank, home defense type shooting. I have yet to get her out onto the trap/skeet range with it. (Heck, I have yet to go myself :uhoh: )

Mike

Prophet-O-Doom
October 27, 2006, 09:55 PM
I don't see prices on their site. Anyone know how much the riot guns are going for?

Dave McCracken
October 27, 2006, 10:28 PM
The new Ithacas have not and will not have the slam fire problem.

Guys,it's fun to do once and then it gets old. Nobody can hit jack slam firing and we do not interdict areas with pump shotguns.

Note that the 3 gun hotshots are not out there all with Model 97s,12s and 37s.

For the record, I think the 37 in both old and new versions is one fine shotgun.

Also, the two pumpguns I personally think are Art of the highest form are a pair made for President Eisenhower. They were 12 gauge and 20 gauge 37s with lots of engraving and gold inlays. Price on the set was $42K.

Coronach
October 28, 2006, 12:23 AM
Nobody can hit jack slam firing and we do not interdict areas with pump shotguns.:uhoh: ...We don't? Aw, man!

My wife's 37 will slamfire. It is, as Dave said, fun for a few rounds. Then it's like...man, I can't hit anything...man, I just burned through how many shells?...man, that's probably not really all that safe.

Once the novelty wears off, it's pretty much worthless.

Mike

LeonCarr
October 28, 2006, 02:19 AM
If memory serves me (and sometimes it does :)), The Ithaca 37 12 gauge was the standard shotgun for LAPD until recently, maybe the 1990s, and then they went to 870s.

I had a chance my senior year of high school to buy a Ithaca 37 12 gauge Deerslayer (rifle sights) in like new condition for 150 bucks, and I was about 149 dollars shy at the time :).

Just my .02,
LeonCarr

Skofnung
October 28, 2006, 02:57 PM
I've had 2 37s since I was a teenager, and I've only slam fired them once each, just to see if I could. I'm not rich enough to waste ammo.

I've never considered the slam fire ability of the 37 to be a feature. Nor do I consider it a drawback. It just is.

Audie
October 28, 2006, 03:15 PM
I have never slammed fired my M12, nor do I intend too...it is just an originality question. It is like Colt's recent repros of the 1911...if they put a type 80 slide in it, I would not have bought it....it is just a matter of keeping a classic design, classic...nothing more.

I think the slam fire feature is might be useful in a military context for laying down a lot of lead in a SHTF situation, but that was not my point....I would like to see a repro in as original a design as possible. Including materials and workmanship....although we know that won't happen....if you want one like they made them 60 years ago, you have to buy a 60 year old gun. :rolleyes:

Black_Talon
October 28, 2006, 08:27 PM
I would like to see a repro in as original a design as possible.

Then you'd also want it made for 2-3/4" shells instead of 3" shells. Going from the original 2-3/4" guns to 3" guns required a redesign of the entire receiver, as well as the hammer, slide, carrier, firing pin, forend tube and forend wood.

Including materials and workmanship....although we know that won't happen....if you want one like they made them 60 years ago, you have to buy a 60 year old gun.

I'd suggest that the new Ithacas will be built to more exacting tolerances (CAD/CAM vs. virtually "hand-made") and with better quality steel than the earlier M37s.

Audie
October 29, 2006, 01:11 AM
I find that really hard to believe....the old manufacturing techniques were superior to those today. Today it would cost too much to build them like they used to. I have not seen any gun made today that can be compared qualtity wise to those made 60 years ago. IMHO.

Prophet-O-Doom
October 29, 2006, 01:27 PM
PRICE, PRICE, PRICE . . . . does anyone know the PRICE they are selling their Model 37 roit guns for?????

c_yeager
October 29, 2006, 06:35 PM
I find that really hard to believe....the old manufacturing techniques were superior to those today. Today it would cost too much to build them like they used to. I have not seen any gun made today that can be compared qualtity wise to those made 60 years ago. IMHO.

Kinda depends on how you define quality. Guns are generally more reliable and accurate today than they have ever been before, of course they are definatly not as pretty as they used to be, and we cheaping out on the quality of certain compenents, which results in guns that probably wont last as long as they used to.

Audie
October 29, 2006, 11:46 PM
Well, this is what I mean. Winchester stopped making the model 12 in the 60's because it was too expensive to make. Stamped metal parts, cast parts, plastic...I am sure there are a lot of very well made guns today that will outlast their owners. But trading craftsmanship for mass production usually means an inferior product.

I too would like to know the price of those Ithacas...the website says to call....anyone call yet?

those Ithacas aren't quite as pretty as the winchester 12's, but they are close...would love to have a trench version. but I'd buy that gun...after I read a few reviews about quality.

greg531mi
October 30, 2006, 03:49 AM
I find that really hard to believe....the old manufacturing techniques were superior to those today. Today it would cost too much to build them like they used to. I have not seen any gun made today that can be compared qualtity wise to those made 60 years ago. IMHO.

Machining is beter than the old days. With CNC machines, they can go faster and more acurate with carbide cutters, they can go through harder and better steel.
What is lacking today, is the fit and finish, having wide tolerances, and not fiting and hand polishing the parts. That takes time and money and a expert, who has twenty thirty years on the job. Also, not many buffers and polishers out there with real skills any more.....It takes skill to hand polish metal for a polished blue finish, and years of practice, that's why all this matte blue is around, cheaper to do, and hides a lot.

Audie
October 30, 2006, 08:39 PM
Greg, I think you said it best....craftsmanship takes too much time, and costs too much money. Just good enough tends to be the modern way. ;)

Black_Talon
October 30, 2006, 09:13 PM
Machining is beter than the old days. With CNC machines, they can go faster and more acurate with carbide cutters, they can go through harder and better steel.
What is lacking today, is the fit and finish, having wide tolerances, and not fiting and hand polishing the parts.

The same CNC process that lets them go faster and more accurate also lets them make parts with much closer tolerances, and much better surface finish, right out of the CNC machine. Tighter tolerances greatly eliminate the need for hand fitting, and better surface finish greatly eliminates the need for secondary operations to clean up/final polish the finished parts.

Prophet-O-Doom
October 30, 2006, 10:34 PM
Unbelievable, over a dozen "senior members" think enough of this topic to give us their wisdom, but no one wants to list the price.

Well, I contacted Ithica and they are selling the Model 37 riot guns for $650.00+ depending on any special work you want on it . . . .
:eek: :eek: :eek: :eek: :eek: :eek: :eek: :eek: :eek: :eek: :eek:

Gunner23
October 31, 2006, 12:18 AM
Audie, I do agree with you to a certain extent. They don't make things like they used to, especially guns. I'm only 23; I haven't seen too many examples of the better vintage firearms. However, I am a machinist...and Talon has a good point. I can say with absolute certainty that the machining systems we have today, as well as the far-superior metals, are AMAZING. There are things that I still can't even fully comprehend in the machining world.

What we are lacking though, are those men with 30 years of gunsmithing experiance. IMHO, you really do lose something in the transfer when you don't have that hand fitting and polishing, making everything fit together perfectly. It goes beyond tolerances and what you see on the blueprint...it's the actual FEEL of the gun. Can't really explain it better than that...sorry if that's a little cryptic, but I think most of you catch my drift. We might have the better steel and the better tooling, but we don't have too much of the old-school skill required to make modern guns really special. That kind of treatment seems to be a rarity these days, which is why you see such a high price tag on anything thats truly "built by hand". Economical guns are cheap for a reason. Sure they function just fine and will likely outlast their owners if cared for properly, but they don't have the feel of a hand built vintage gun.

Audie
October 31, 2006, 01:48 AM
I think today, people would not pay the price for that kind of craftsmanship.
I am new to shotguns, so I really can't comment to much about them, but I do own all the modern 1911 clones. None of them come close to my 1918 and 1943 Colts. Not even Colt's new repro.

I really look forward to reading a review of this Ithaca repro. Now we have a price, next, someone needs to get one.

bowfin
October 31, 2006, 05:17 PM
I agree totally with Black Talon on the superiority of CNC machining.

I used to have to hold tolerances on machined parts (as close as .0002") on conventional "old style" machines, and did the same on CNC machines. It was a stressful adventure on the first group, I (or you, if it was set up and you can push a button) could do it with boring regularity on the CNCs, and the finish using coated carbide inserts and TiCN inserts wasn't even close. Neither was the economics. I once had to do the same job using conventional tooling and a Haas CNC milling center with the appropriate cutting tools. The first way took nine minutes and thirty seconds per profile, the second took one minute, ten seconds. Surface finish was between 125 and 250 with the non CNC machine, it was about 62 with the CNC.

CNCs are also able to do mix and match directions of cutting in all directions (is plural of axis axes?), so one can cut radii (curves), angles, steps, and all sorts of odd shapes on parts that used to take a special step or steps with a special tool.

The only thing CNCs can't do is care about the final product. That still takes a human to care enough to keep his parts in tolerance and not throw a bad one in the pile to make rate or keep his numbers up, regardless of what machine he is running.

If you don't already know it, the advent of CNC machining has revolutionized the gun industry, same as electricity and the invention of steel.

ryoushi
November 1, 2006, 11:34 AM
Well, I contacted Ithica and they are selling the Model 37 riot guns for $650.00+ depending on any special work you want on it . . . .


Thanks for the price check. A brand new, walnut stocked 870 Police goes for what, $450? And the new Ithaca's weigh a bit more than those old 37s we all love. So there you have it. Still...a M37 Riot Gun with a back bored IC barrel would be sweet indeed.

Coronach
November 1, 2006, 12:02 PM
(is plural of axis axes?)Yep.

Here is a question. If a guy wanted to start up his own little gun-making bidness, how much would a basic CNC setup cost? Not one of the huge machines like the Remchesters use, but something that would enable a gunsmith to take advantage of the advances in CNC. I'm aware that the more advanced machines might be able to make multiple cuts in the same run, whereas basic machine might require multiple runs to get the same effect.

Still, how much? And while this is a little bit of thread veer, a discussion of this will help show mow much Ithaca, et al, have to pay in startup costs before they even produce a single gun for sale.

And the new Ithaca's weigh a bit more than those old 37s we all love.They do? Why?

Thanks,

Mike

ryoushi
November 1, 2006, 01:11 PM
And the new Ithaca's weigh a bit more than those old 37s we all love.
They do? Why?

Thanks,

Mike

(Black Talon) Going from the original 2-3/4" guns to 3" guns required a redesign of the entire receiver, as well as the hammer, slide, carrier, firing pin, forend tube and forend wood.

Coronach
November 1, 2006, 01:41 PM
Hmm.

I wonder how much has changed? As in, were the necessary parts just redimensioned, or is the action a whole new design?

Thanks, I missed the bit about going from 2 3/4" to 3"...that would explain the extra weight.

Mike

Black_Talon
November 1, 2006, 07:51 PM
Hmm.

I wonder how much has changed? As in, were the necessary parts just redimensioned, or is the action a whole new design?

Mostly the parts were just redimensioned to make up for the 1/4" longer action. The design is exactly the same as it's always been.


Thanks, I missed the bit about going from 2 3/4" to 3"...that would explain the extra weight.

I'm sure that accounts for most of the 1/2 pound of additional weight, although the hammer is a bit longer (thicker?) as well.

KarbineKrazy
November 1, 2006, 11:54 PM
I am an ithaca nut.
I have 4 model 37s and looks like I need to buy one more.

I have an early '50s waterfowl model that was chopped down to 18.5 inches and fitted w/ a pistol grip
a '60s DS police gun w/ some rugged looking rifle sights on a choke tubed 20 inch barrel.
an early '70s deluxe M37 w/ a 28 in Full choke barrel and a 28 inch modified barrel
not sure of the year but a 3 inch magnum model!!! I just picked it up.
All are 12 gauges, gotta get some pics up for you guys.

I really want a full mag tube model w/ a walnut stock(3 inch mag would be nice too)

I would like to put together an M37 w/ a 22-24 inch barrel(w/ tubes) and a straight english stock.

So, I guess I need two more ithaca's...

Wags
November 2, 2006, 07:33 AM
Well, I contacted Ithica and they are selling the Model 37 riot guns for $650.00+ depending on any special work you want on it . . . .


It would be cheaper for me to buy a new 18.5" barrel from Sharps Gun Supply in Canada and have Les Hovencamp at Diamond Gunsmithing fit it on my 12ga 2 3/4" Mod 37 manufactured in 1957 shipping included. I was thinking this new Riot model would be in the market of lets say $550 or less considering this is a no frills model. I do wish these new guys luck with Ithaca Gun, but come on.......... $650+?

ajkurp
November 5, 2006, 10:10 PM
..to the bottom eject is that the select-a-slug maneuver can not be done as it can with Mossberg 500 series and 870s. That can be a serious tactical liability.

BTW- Norinco makes a decent Model 37 clone that can be had under $200. Andersoncorner.com in Idaho has them for $146.

greg531mi
November 8, 2006, 01:16 AM
I think today, people would not pay the price for that kind of craftsmanship

Why do you think gun owners buy a Les Bair for $1600, when they could have got a Springfield for a lot less?

I bought a Chinese 37 riot gun around here for $99 at Dunhams, when they have their specials....and am happy with it. Of course, it is not a real 37, but a good house gun.....

Audie
November 8, 2006, 01:05 PM
I would, you might, but many won't...else they would be more popular. Most folks would rather buy a springer for much less money.

Like it or not, we do not live in a society that values craftsmanship. Mass production, miniturization....order of the day. If the gun lasts for the warranty period, good enough...It was different in the not so different past. Technology and economics has changed manufacturing forever.

Nothing made today (at reasonable prices) feels like an "old" gun. ;)

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