I have an old Remington Model 12 Gallery Special in 22 Short. I checked the serial number along time ago and it was either from 1914 or 1917, I can't remember which.
Very nice thats a hard one to find and an early one also.
I have an old Remington Model 12 Gallery Special in 22 Short. I checked the serial number along time ago and it was either from 1914 or 1917, I can't remember which.
Its always nice to have guns that have been in the family a while glad to hear you still get to enjoy it.Not really old or rare I guess, but I have a Marlin Mountie built in 1964 and my dad's old 39a built in 1969 that I love to shoot.
Those are cool guns also. Does it still have all the original sights? Seem like the rear sight is missing a lot of times?Mossberg 44 us mint condition!!
Dont see these very oftern either. seen my first one this year at a gun show but the stock had a crack in it. Not sure if thats a normal problem or not.Mid 60's Marlin 57M in 22 mag. It's a great rifle.
I love these guns ive got a few of them. Great shooters and very accurate. I also have the smoothbore version.Early production Winchester mdl 67, 1934 or early 1935. Being a manually cocked single shot a box of ammo lasts a loonnngggg time, which is nice.
Ho.w is the trigger pull on yours? I had owned one a while back that if you breathed on it wrong it fired. Not an issue if you where ready for it. thanks for the pictureI have a nice 1957 Remington Model 513-T Matchmaster. It holds nice groups despite its age.
I totally agree with this. Ive got a 52a and can consistently shoot a 6"x6" steel plate with open sights at 200yrd. best shooting 22 ive encountered.Its not super rare, but a Winchester 52d target rifle from the CMP. It is an amazing shooter though.
The 241's are some of my favorites. when ya got one of these in your hands it feels like ya got something. thanks for the share.I have a Remington speedmaster 241 in 22 short that was my grandfathers. Based on serial# it should be around 1936.
Same here. My Grandfather's Model 67 from the early 30's, no serial number. He died in 1997.Early production Winchester mdl 67, 1934 or early 1935. Being a manually cocked single shot a box of ammo lasts a loonnngggg time, which is nice.
Same here. My Grandfather's Model 67 from the early 30's, ...
Awhile ago, I picked up a model 1889 Swiss long rifle which had been converted by a Swiss gunsmith into a single shot .22. Probably the most overbuilt and heaviest .22 I've ever seen and a lot of fun to shoot.
It's hard to say what's rare these days. You can find and buy almost anything on the internet, if you are willing to pay for it.
How about a Remington Model 37? As it came from the factory. 99% condition. You don't see many that have not been altered in any condition.