Such a contraption could have only been designed by a genius... #asmr #callofduty #guns #warzone #battlefield #pistol #rifle #sniper #ww1 #ww2 #america #winchester
@@mikegrazio5376 I am sorry about my English, I was talking about the action of ejecting the used cartridge and putting another one on the chamber by using the bolt, that would take less than 20 seconds and still having the target on sight I guess.
I hate the new trend of trying to make lever actions seem like theyre some sort of rapid fire assault weapon. Call it like it is. A lever gun and an ar15 are handy, ergonomic, and efficient rifles.
@@themasterninja110 no there were AKA “Assult Rifles” before 1944 you are most likely thinking of the STG44 but Russia had Fedorov Avtomat (FA) made in 1913 and produced from 1915-1925
@@BullseyeBenR nope. It was 1944 with the stg44. Why? Becuase the stermguwar roughly translates to assault rifle and gave the weapon class its name. It's widely regarded as the first one.
@@themasterninja110 main stream STG44 but the FA is the first full auto mag fed rifle pre dating the STG44. But the Assault Rifle of the 1800’s was a joke. The argument is like me telling you the 30-03 is the parent cartridge for the 30-06. It’s really semantics. Just because a few sites state the STG 44 is the 1st doesn’t make it universally true. They also had the MP43 and MP44 or the French Ribeyerolled which was in the French military in 1920
@@ParaBellaActual for me it was pretty good. I mean it was basically a mix of a normal rifle with a sniper. So It was good for close range to medium range. Which is more useful (in my opinion) then one that is preferred for super long range
@@nathankleber9150 It’s a LeverAction-Sniper-Assault-Cannon chambering a .30 Caliber Clip. It only targets children, puppies, and communists… As designed by George Washington 😎
It was. The Winchester in all its variants is a development of the Henry lever action rifle. The Henry was introduced in 1860. It saw service on both sides of the war, but neither side opted to make it a service rifle in any meaningful numbers. So while it was available, it did not have a meaningful impact on the war, outside a few noteworthy incidents. Sadly, from its inception to the current day, the US military has never seen fit to adopt a Henry/Winchester as a service or duty rifle.
@@elduderinolebowski5411 The first lever action that had a action capable of handling large caliber rounds was the Marlin M1881 in the Marlin 40-60 and Military 45-70. If you are lucky enough to find one under serial production #300 it was the "heavy receiver" buy it.
@@kenpatterson2948 technically that's not true. the Spencer lever action came first, in 1860, and was chambered is .56-50 (really .52 but who's counting?). Unlike the other lever action rifles of its time or later, the Spencer was adopted by the Union as a service rifle. In addition, the Winchester 1876 was also a "big bore" rifle, chambered from .40-60 all the way up to .50-95. its action was too short (not too weak as many believe), to chamber the full length .45-70 Government. the introduction of the 1886, which was both longer and significantly stronger, solved that problem. So no, the Marlin 1881 wasn't the first. and while I like Marlin, my personal favourite being the 1895 Cowboy in .45-70, and having owned both, I do think the Winchester is a better rifle. I think the Henry is better than either, though.
@@elduderinolebowski5411 Agree the Spencer not considered a true lever action technically is. The Ball & Williams 7-shot by E.G. Lamson was, the Triplett & Scott although not lever action did have a loading tube thru the stock both used in Civil war. I believe Spencer early Rifle not Carbine did have a 56-56 Spencer Round. I like you enjoy the Antiques. I have .56-50 & .56-52 rounds not certain on date but made before 1877. I own an Evans (Interesting) Lever Action that holds 28 rounds of the .44 Evans. I am biased towards the Marlin's owning M 1881 .40-60, M1881 .45-70, M1889 .32, M1889 .38, M1892 .32, M1893 .32-40, M1894 .32- 40 Deluxe, M1893 .30-30, M1894 .25-20, M1895 .45-90. I do collect the military breech loaders owning 27 different makes and models from M1843 Hall-North, M1841 Jenks, Sharps to the Burnside made M1865 Spencer @elduderinolebowski5411 any leads on any martially marked Gibbs, Lindner, Warner, Ball & Williams 7-shot, Burnside 3rd type, Tarpley, Morse and Confederate Sharps by S.C. Robinson with NRA rating of very good or better would be greatly appreciated.
Sorry for your loss on the guns I have one just like it with a saddle ring on it I love it. It’s got some rust around it. I wanna see if I can blue it. I don’t know if it’ll work or not.
Just bought a Henry side loading golden boy in 30-30, I absolutely love it. I prefer the modern Henry’s to modern Winchester replicas but any original Winchester pre-model 1895 I would love to own
Try .38-55, when you can even find a box of it the stuff costs an eye-popping amount, thankfully I've inherited plenty of reloading recipes and equipment, otherwise my old Model 93 would never leave the safe lol
@@GOLD_FEVER what button? The teeny tiny itty bitty thing that gets pressed when you grab the lever loop??? Its got like 2 lbs of spring pressure lmfao, how is it affecting anything Also, its there so it doesnt fire out of battery, so you know, it doesnt explode?
make you realize the genius of the bolt action design when you spend a week fucking with gears because you did not pay attention to the ordering when you disassembled it.
Ai un par de Réplicas de Wuinchester Palankeros en calibre 22 largo tenía un Remington una Belleza k simplicidad de tiro te asia viajar al oeste con cada disparo 😊😊
I kinda agree with the sentiment; I don't want to ever use my guns for the intended purpose of owning them (I won't hesitate if forced, though), but I absolutely love the engineering of them. I hope to design my own guns some day. There's a lot that goes into it, a lot I have to learn first. Meanwhile, building them is a lot of fun. And yes, putting together an AR-15 without kits or pre-fabs is building, not assembling. You don't say you're assembling a Lego model, or assembling a custom gaming PC, do you? No, you build them, just like you build an AR-15. 🇺🇸
As a gun person I totally agree with you 👌🏻 BUT if you are in for the engineering side of guns , I can't stress enough that you really check out some of the cold war stuff. When America contracted arms manufacturers around the world to develop a new rifle , they came up with amazing stuff. The german entry , the G11, was in fact so masterfully engineered, that the grunts would not have been able to fieldstrip the gun. And that's...well pretty problematic with a rifle for the military. Sorry for my rant
@@raditya5663Someone in the 1890s probably said the same for these rifles, considering every single lever action all followed the same or similliar designs to one another with minor improvements between them...almost like...wow almost like today's AR-15 models Dont get me started on bolt action rifles or break action shotguns neither
Gunsmith : So how do you want your firearms to be made? Powerful? Fast?Fast handling? Cowdude : I want me to look GOOD just holding it. Gunsmith : Well shoot, say no more
I'm 73 and love my Tarus G2 .40 cal. Easy to stuff in my coat pocket if need be. As a companion, I'd want a .45 long Colt Derringer that allows 410 shot shells as an alternative mixed bag. My 3.5" 12 ga 887 Remington Armor Lokt is indestructable. Those 3.5s throw out an extra ½ oz of Pb and you can really feel that recoil. You could drop this shotgun, on the rocks, and never know it. Great survival gun as it never rusts or scrapes on anything.
Fine American Craftsmanship gone forever. I own models of shotguns, rifles, and handguns dating back from 1923 to the early 1980's. Even though I've been fortunate in life, I treasure my collection as American history. When I'm gone, they will go to my son's. They were raised to understand just what it is their receiving.
A massive bill for FFL transfer per gun if the azf and grabbers keep it up and continue to win by dragging things thru courts over and over and over up and down up and down all paid for by the very people beings accosted.
Just a quick tip when you're reloading the tube magazine. Don't try and push every round all the way in until it shuts again, leave it partially resting on the rear of the casing so it's faster and easier to load the next one.
@@Swishersweetcigarilo I had a heck of a time to find brass for it. 32 Win Special is not a common round. Bullets and dies were not hard to get. I just test fired it and it worked really well.
In the early 1980s, winchester model 94's would frequently go on sale just before hunting season for $150. Same with the Marlins 30.30s. That's $576 in today's money. Times have changed. The working man's deer rifle, even adjusted for inflation doubled in price.
Imagine my glee when I walked into dicks and 30--30 leverevolution ammo was 1/2 price closeout $14/box... got what they had at MY price...but I remember $9 box too... F-dix s.goods !!!
Xact same rifle. Mine belonged to my father, then my oldest brother, then my middle brother, now me. Priceless to me. Wish it wasn't peep but for obvious reasons I'll never change it
IDK what technology was used for barrels in these things but we need to bring that back. My 30-30 Winchester is more accurate than any modern bolt gun or semi auto I own. Just a fantastic old gun
Well, you probably would have been coming from a falling block or other breech loader, which would in turn have replaced a muzzle loaded minie ball rifle in the previous generation, and probably a ball rifle or smooth bore musket before that.
muzzleloading rifles.. muskets were smooth bore however just about every infantry man in the civil war was using rifled barrels.. that's where they realized they really shouldn't line up and shoot in volleys anymore because now you're reliably hitting your target and that made for some STEEP casualties while the generals slowly learned or didn't learn that warfare was completely different now.. as usual, actually
@@DB-sd3cw why do parasites like you exist? What's cringe is going out of your way, spending time to type hate that wasn't incited. Just piss off, remain silent and spare us all you toxic prick. Say something Kind and nice or shut the F up. We don't need hate and negativity. Cringy creep.
I remember when my buddy bought a 30-06 lever action while I was in college. That was such a blast to shoot and it might sound naive, but you could just feel the history of firearm development every time you used it
I was just thinking how this isn't really an assault rifle because it's not all black and scary looking, and it doesn't have the 30 round caliber clip. It probably won't even shoot 30 rounds in half a second, or weigh as much as 10 moving boxes.
I see someone commented on the price of 30-30 rounds. I found a old box with a couple left that I purchased in the 90s, 6 bucks. I bought a new box this year just to have them, 23$. 😂 seen them in other stores as much as 29$.
Ong! The stupidity abounds🤣 First off I'm pretty sure the the person who posted this was being sarcastic...as far as the reply comments .. nice try on the word play of "assault" As a 82nd Airborne Vet the term " assault" means. Lightweight, compact, high rate of fire...this does not rate that term! I am also a liberal, and I Do own a 30 cal carbine And a Henry repeater...before anyone wants to jump to more unfounded stupid opinions...If everyone would stop being tarded about this we might be able to solve some issues
Wow same here! It was my grandfathers subsistence rifle in Tok, Alaska. Took many deer. Someday I'm gonna find dies or sizing dies and load for it (never shot it😢)
I know it’s a joke about calling it an assault weapon but honestly imagine being an infantryman attempting to hold a position with a muzzle loader or trap door rifle, and then three or four guys rush your position with these things. Like, it kind of is an ideal weapon for laying down fire while advancing on, that is, assaulting, an enemy behind cover.
I'd wager more united states law enforcement and civilians were killed by this exact make and model firearm than any other single model, outside of wartime
I don't care if lever guns are obsolete, I want one. Thing is, because they are obsolete, they are low on my firearm purchase list, and I haven't gotten to 'em yet... I will, though! Too cool not to have!