Pre or Post 64
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Please post political post in the new Politics forum.
Pre or Post 64
I know this has been talked about several times over, but I simply cannot find the old post. Went to a Gun Shop an hours drive away, and they had quite a few model 94 Winchesters on hand. One in particular had a serial number 2 million 7 something, should have wrote it down. Anyway the gun looked to be in good shape for 399.00, not really a bad price no matter the year. If it would have been a 32 special it would have come home with me. I just wanted to know if there is a way to tell the difference by glancing at the rifle?
Last edited by Bigahh on Tue Mar 25, 2008 9:01 pm, edited 1 time in total.
- Old Savage
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Here's the link to the excellent pictorial that J Miller put together.
http://onesticky.levergunscommunity.com ... sters.html
http://onesticky.levergunscommunity.com ... sters.html
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Lastmohecken
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I always look for the screw, but some of the angle ejects have the screw, however they should be identifiable as angle ejects.TedH wrote:There are several ways to tell very quickly. The easiest is to look at the bottom of the action. If there is a screw in the forward end of the link, then it's a pre-64. No screw, post-64.
Also, when you pick one up if the lever is already hard against the small of the stock, it's probably a pre-64, because post 64s are set up a little different where the lever has to be squeased and held against the grip, to make them fire. This is one reason I prefer pre-64s. I don't like the feeling of that lever moving.
- Griff
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All Winchester 1894/94s require squeezing the lever up against the bottom of the lower tang in order to fire. The trigger block safety has been a feature since 1894. I have a very late '63, #2584xxx. According to Armscollectors.com, the post 64 model began with # 2,700,000.Lastmohecken wrote:I always look for the screw, but some of the angle ejects have the screw, however they should be identifiable as angle ejects.TedH wrote:There are several ways to tell very quickly. The easiest is to look at the bottom of the action. If there is a screw in the forward end of the link, then it's a pre-64. No screw, post-64.
Also, when you pick one up if the lever is already hard against the small of the stock, it's probably a pre-64, because post 64s are set up a little different where the lever has to be squeased and held against the grip, to make them fire. This is one reason I prefer pre-64s. I don't like the feeling of that lever moving.
Griff,
SASS/CMSA #93
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There is a fine line between hobby & obsession!
AND... I'm over it!!
No I ain't ready, but let's do it anyway!
SASS/CMSA #93
NRA Patron
GUSA #93
There is a fine line between hobby & obsession!
AND... I'm over it!!
No I ain't ready, but let's do it anyway!
