i do have in old fox i can cut down i mite just do that
thanks guys
The one shotgun that I wish I still had was a Fox Model B, twin trigger version. After I bought it brand new, I didn't use it much because I instantly hated the fat forearm. At that time (late 1980's), one could buy stocks and forearms for about any gun made, from a company whose name escapes me at this senior moment. I called them, and ordered a semi-inletted one along with their standard, more slender forearm. They asked a few questions over the phone, such as how tall I was, if I was left or right-handed, my approximate weight, etc., along with the make and model of my gun. Also if I wanted an English blank or a pistol grip one, and if I wanted them to furnish/fit the buttpad. Yep--and English stock all the way. That was a winter project, and when I was done, my claybird score went from miserable to great all of a sudden. I moved, and a co-worker talked me out of that little 26 inch Model B that I couldn't seem to miss with. Those old Foxes, with decent wood, are great guns. If you cut it down, you may want t ask a gunsmith (if you aren't one yourself) if what you have left can be fitted with choke tubes. Good luck. Wish I could remember the name of that stock company--they went out of business in the early 1990's.