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This Henry infomercial is worthwhile if for no other reason than it demonstrates, for those who aren’t aware, the surprisingly wide range of guns in the New Jersey-based gun maker’s lineup. And that range is about to get a little wider with the addition of three new offerings for next year. At about the 19:50 mark, Henry impresario Anthony Imperato spills the beans on the addition of smoothbores to Henry’s repertoire.

The latest: the Henry Lever Action Shotgun in .410, which will be available in a couple of barrel lengths. They’re also adding a single shot model chambered in .12, .20 and .410 gauges.

shotgun

Another Henry first: a non-lever action rifle called, logically enough, the Henry Single Shot Rifle. That one will be offered in a variety of calibers including .308, .223, .243, and .45-70 and will also hit the stores next year.

singleshot

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55 COMMENTS

  1. I think the lever action 410 would be special and unlike what is available elsewhere. I want one as it would go perfectly with my lever action Henry rifle.

    • As someone who owned the Rossi rio grande 410, I can tell you that the novelty fades pretty quick. Barrel and choke wasn’t all that great for hunting, you couldn’t plug it to two shots to make it legal for water fowl, and 410 is just so dang expensive. You can get to boxes of 12 or 20 gauge shells for the price of one box of 410.

      • I like the novelty of a lever action shotgun but the only reason I want a 410 is that I’ve never had one and I already have a 12 gauge, a 16 gauge and a 20 gauge. I have a pump and two single shots and I don’t want an automatic.

        • Looking at the single shot, there seems to be another lever next to the hammer. Are they making a rolling block?

        • I’m wondering too. Maybe it’s the action unlock lever? I’d actually be more interested in a rolling-block than a break-action, especially a .45-70 set up for tang or ladder sights to emulate an 1880s target rifle!!

        • Winchester made a lever shotgun in the 1890’s. A friend owned one. It was very slow to chamber next round after firing. Not that good an idea after all.

    • I wonder if Henry would make a better survival rifle/shotgun combo the .22/.410 like in . say .22 Hornet and 20 ga? Make it a takedown too. I’d buy one, and any others would too.

  2. I know relocating isn’t a quick or cheap process, but why are so many firearms manufacturers located ‘behind enemy lines’?

      • That’s true for most of the gun manufacturers in the northeast, but Henry started making guns in 1993 – long after it had been made clear where gun rights stand in New York and New Jersey. The Imperatos are New York guys, though, and I think they just didn’t want to leave the NYC area (Henrys were made in freakin’ Brooklyn for the first decade or so!).

        But even Henry understands how the political winds are blowing in their home state – they now have a big facility in Wisconsin.

      • Fascist revolution? You sound like a Marxist.

        Unfortunately it’s liberalism taken to its logical conclusion, not fascism or communism, that has befallen us.

    • Because the gunmakers and the machine tool industry grew up, side-by-side, in the small New England/NJ/NY industrial towns with water power.

      Most people forget that before the 1900’s, machine shops were powered by line shafts that ran the length of the shop, and you’d power your lathe, mill, grinders, etc with a leather drive belt that came down off a wooden pulley on the line shaft. Well, the gun makers located in New England because the small hydro power resources were available, so then the machine tool industry grew up alongside them. Today, if you need machines or tooling in New England, New Jersey, the eastern PA region – you can have ANYTHING you need literally in hours.

      Once that business infrastructure and support is there, it’s a pretty big barrier to just up and move. Take Magpul as an example: they single-handedly kept some injection molding support companies in the Denver area in business. They need those shops close by to support their business. That’s why the HQ of Magpul was able to move to TX, but the actual production moved to Cheyenne, just over the state line – but still only 90 minutes from Denver.

      Moving a gun company away from the machine tool, tooling, steel and other support businesses is a huge increase in cost.

      As a guy in rural Wyoming who needs machine tooling support occasionally, I’m here to tell you that putting a company that uses machine tooling into Wyoming is a big, big uphill push – because if you need (eg) an end mill resharpened today, if you need a new CNC probe today, if you need various machines serviced today – because not having those things means that your production line comes to a stop – well, you’d better not move to anywhere but the southeast corner of Wyoming. In the rest of the state, you simply cannot obtain that support – at any price. It’s a huge barrier to economic development and attracting gun companies to relocate to these areas.

      • For what it’s worth, Imperato himself has said something very similar. His “support network” of vendors and such is excellent in Bayonne.

        • I guess he never heard about this new thing called “same day air delivery.” Like UPS and Fedex do. But hey, if the tax breaks are good, why be concerned that your employees and their neighbors cannot legally own the product you manufacture?

        • “Same day air delivery” means nothing when you need heavy things, inputs in bulk, etc.

          And, I would add, there are many places in the intermountain west where there is no “same day” service. Oh, FedEx, UPS, DHL and the USPS will sell you and charge you for “same day” service… but there will be no “same day service,” even in good weather.

    • Yep, and glad to see it. I was mulling a single shot H&R in .243 for my daughter when they shut down. I might have to rekindle the idea.

    • Absolutely and Henry’s quality is very good. The only questions this leaves are: is the single shot a break action and if yes, will Henry offer an extra barrel option like H&R did?

      Then there’s the price thing too. $300 for a break action single shot is asking a lot for something that probably only costs $100 to produce.

      • Before NEF/H&R closed down, their pricing was well over $200, the quality variable and generally crap. If Henry can (and I’m sure will) keep the level of quality up, just the superior wood makes the price reasonable compared to the old NEF/H&R. I was a Handi user, to the point that I built a few barrels on stubs and lugs I machined. And a tight SOB to boot. I’d happily pay $300 or a well made single shot with nice wood, and then likely spend 2/3 of that again to make a barrel in .357 mag or .32 H&R. Value is an individual choice. Aim small.

    • H&R made a .45-70 with a tang-mounted creedmore type rear sight and (I think) a bubble level front sight; sorta reminiscent of nice Sharps for long range work.
      C’mon Henry, y’all gotta give us that option. I’d love such a rifle wearing the Henry name.

  3. I’ve wanted a lever-action shotgun for some time (though would prefer 20 gauge to .410)… You have my interest piqued, Henry…

    I do find it mildly amusing that Henry Repeating Arms is making single-shots now…

  4. Singe shot shotguns would be great for trap, if they weren’t so darned light. Mass is your friend when you’re going through four boxes of 12 gauge in an evening. Weight, balance, ergonomics and fit are all very important in the clay sports.

    I have no idea if Henry has a clue how to make a good shotgun. Their rifles are fun to shoot but not exactly wonders of ergonomics. So I wouldn’t buy one unless I had a chance to put a few boxes of shells through it first.

  5. I’d be interested in both the lever .410 and the single-shot rifles.

    I have a few Rossi single shots (youth) that I started my boys on. The work just peachy for that, but their build quality and accuracy are fair at best (yes, I knew that going in).

    I’ve got a Thompson Contender and a few barrels, but I’d like to have something priced between the two…

  6. I want them to make a really small, super lightweight single shot rifle in .357 mag. Oh and it’s got to have sights on it, preferably aperture but I’ll settle for buckhorn.

  7. i think my salt gun is .12 gauge.
    with the .20 you could use up all those old sheridan pellets.
    lets hope they design a lever action .9mm.

    • 10mm lever action would be better; I am building a 9mm AR which IMHO is better for the AR-15 platform than a lever gun.
      But why not both?
      After all, more is better when it comes to firepower, platforms, and calibers.

    • The gauge of the shotgun is the number of balls that size to make up one pound, right? 12 gauge makes 12 slugs out of a pound, 20 gauge makes 20. So a .12 gauge shot gun would require more than 8 pounds of lead to make a single slug! Now that mutha will have some kick!

  8. Price is going to be a factor here with the single shot rifles. H&R/NEF and Rossi priced theirs around $150-$250 and Thompson Center something around $800. For $250 or less, you can’t beat a good single shot rifle, but going above that price is putting it up against budget bolt guns like the Savage Axis, Ruger American, Mossberg Patriot that are lighter, have faster follow up shots (hunting isn’t the focus when I mention this) and are generally very accurate for the money being spent.

    I can see why H&R was shut down because the competition from those bolt guns is very stiff, but Freedumb Group ain’t got a clue how to do anything other than destroy a brand and a company.

  9. If you go to Henry’s web site you can order a free catalog that features the new guns. They don’t go on the market until January.

  10. I spoke with over Mr. Imperato in 2008. I had a problem with one of their pump rifles. He personally called me at home at 8PM of the same day that I made the complaint – – he apologized for the problem and offered to send a replacement lever action (of higher grade and higher cost) to make it right. During that call, I recommended that he build a lever action 410 – – specifically, I said that I would buy three (one for each son). I guess I had better get the check book ready! Henry is a great company – – they make great products – – they deserve high praise. Mr. Imperato is a gentleman and a professional. Bravo!

  11. Their FIRST non-lever action rifle?

    They have pumps, bolts, and semi-automatics; and have for a while.

    If it’s a gun, a firearm, AND a rifle, but in 22LR; even at TTAG it doesn’t count?

  12. I think they need to look at The H&R section on graybeardoutdoors boards to get a feel for what consumers want in a singleshot rifle.

  13. Technically, isn’t it correctly referred to as a .410 “bore” rather than a .410 “gauge”? Were it measured as a gauge, as are its larger stablemates, wouldn’t a diameter of.410″ be about a 30 gauge? No big. I’d love to have one anyway. You guys are great! BTW, my father, mother, uncle, cousins, brother and I all worked for Herters in Waseca, MN many, many, years ago.

  14. Those single shots look pretty good to me. A decent quality .308 with a 22″ barrel, measuring under 40 “, weighing around 7lbs, and with the option of using irons… To me that is a pretty darn practical hunting\ trapline rifle, those are numbers worth packing around shells in your pocket for.

  15. I am anticipating a single shot .308. Will probably buy one. I hope the quality is the same as other henry rifles. Price compared to a Ruger #1 is great. Hope they shoot as well.

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