Manual

10
NOT ATTEMPT TO SHOOT IT OUT WITH ANOTHER CARTRIDGE, OR
BLOW IT OUT WITH A BLANK CARTRIDGE OR A CARTRIDGE FROM
WHICH THE SHOT HAS BEEN REMOVED. SUCH TECHNIQUE(S) CAN
GENERATE EXCESSIVE PRESSURE, DAMAGE THE FIREARM AND CAUSE
SERIOUS PERSONAL INJURY. If the blockage can be removed with a cleaning
rod, clean any unburned powder grains from the bore, chambers and mechanism
before resuming shooting. If the blockage cannot be dislodged by tapping it with
a cleaning rod, take the firearm to a gunsmith.
W A R N I N G (EYE AND EAR PROTECTION)
When shooting, full eye and ear protection is mandatory at all times. Shooters
and spectators must wear shooting glasses and hearing protection to prevent
eye injury and hearing loss. Vision and hearing impairment can occur with only
one moment of non-protection.
W A R N I N G (Mechanical Malfunctions)
STOP SHOOTING IMMEDIATELY AND UNLOAD YOUR FIREARM if your
firearm develops: a mechanical malfunction; binding or stoppage; spitting powder/
gas; a punctured cartridge primer; a bulged or ruptured cartridge case; or a
sound on firing does not sound quite right. Do NOT try one more shot but unload
your firearm and take it and the ammunition to a qualified gunsmith or send the
firearm back to European American Armory Corp. for examination. Do not
assume that the shotgun is empty merely because you checked the chamber.
You must also check the bore for any fired shot or wad jammed inside the
barrel.
BASIC PARTS OF YOUR SHOTGUN
EXTERNAL CONTROL PARTS:
Trigger Block Safety: The safety mechanism of the shotgun provides protection
against accidental and unintentional discharge under normal
usage when properly engaged and in good working order.
The safety mechanism is not a substitute for following the
rules of safe gun handling. Do not disengage the safety
unless you are ready to fire the shotgun. MAKE SURE YOU
UNDERSTAND HOW THE SAFETY WORKS BEFORE
YOU LOAD OR USE THE SHOTGUN.
The safety mechanism is a tang-style safety located behind
the top lever. See Figure 6. To place the safety in the “on”
Figure 6