Barrel length 65 cm (25,5"), stock length 34 cm (13,5"), overall length 112 cm (44"), weight 3,3 kg, year of manufacture 1971, German proof, condition 2-3
Black action and fittings, commemorative engraving of 100 years of the National Rifle Association of the USA, hinged tangent sight (loose), full walnut stock with buttplate, inlaid medal in buttstock, sling swivels, Commemorative Model, with original box.
The history of Winchester goes back to developments in and before the time of the American Civil War. The Henry Rifle produced by the New Haven Arms Company and developed by Benjamin Tyler Henry was particularly influential in this regard. Finally, in 1866, Boston-born Oliver Winchester turned it into the Winchester Repeating Arms Company in New Haven, Connecticut. The first lever action rifles were expensive due to their complex construction. At the same time, their enormous potential was impressive. The concept of a magazine tube below the barrel and a lever action (toggle joint) for feeding and ejecting cartridges had just begun to gain momentum in its development. Other technicians such as Nelson King (known for the Model 1866 in gunmetal manufacturing also called Yellow Boy) or John Moses Browning (block breech) were involved in the evolution of the concept. The original model underwent a multitude of changes, optimizations and variants. Whether in the magazine tube, the loading mechanism, breech, ejection or in the change of ammunition to modern powerful centerfire cartridges. It quickly developed its own tradition, the different types themselves were titled with model and year based on the year of introduction. The brand name persists to this day, both in the field of ammunition or weapons is manufactured. For collectors, in addition to the valuable historical originals, there are a number of limited special editions.
Category: Repeating Rifles