Thanks to Henry Repeating Arms for providing us with this beautiful rifle! Funniest comment gets a free t-shirt of their choice from our merch store www.mishasguns.com/
I like how they did an exact faithful recreation and didnt cuck it with how it wasnt with like safteys or dumb junk they juat folllwed the original patent
@@HAKUNAMATATA45622 "The cows ain't even phased at this point" = "The cows aren't affected in any way, since they've experienced gunfire so often." you're welcome.
The cows aren't even phased because they know of they are more than 20 feet from he he won't hit shit 😂😂. RU-vidrs who do this crap pretending to be marksmen are hilarious. Give someone a haircut with a mauser at 700 yards and i'll be impressed. If i can do it with my shaky ass hands any of you could do it too with a little practuce 👍
@@hooks_and_hornsit's actually the correct rifle. Confederate Colonel John Mosby said those exact words about the Henry rifle after encountering it during raids on Union positions.
@@yurisv7315 I was pretty sure I read that the Spencer was what they were referring to. The Spencer holds 7 rounds for 7 days. I could be wrong though been a while since I studied it
@rezaganjizadeh4263 you can just take so many people walking in front of horse, getting in way when you're going to the trapper or losses in Dominoes from guys on a lucky streak. They all had it coming.
@@AlasdairGRwhat a whimpsy "exception" specially if solved by something so simple as just any rag laying around really. Even then, the shooting range leather gloves you should be using, they'd make any one say: neat, didn't knew that was a smooth brain people's problem.
That rifle is so shiny, the table being reflected on it in the thumbnail made me think it was one of those home made guns I keep seeing pop up. Very nice.
At the plant there is a scrap bin of bad parts in various stages and alot look like that. Its so hard to see them in the light because of how well they reflect
its 100% a Litchfield, Lancaster repeaters have a wooden "grip" on the barrel where Litchfield's have no grip. i believe the Lancaster repeater is based of the Winchester model 1866 and the Litchfield is based of the 1860 henry repeating rifle
Since I was a little child, this rifle did something to me. It was used in my favorite western movies and it had this special look, a beautiful melange of steel, wood and craftsmanship. Not just a gun. A timeless tool of sheer aesthetics.
@@Florida_Boy-w3m imo its the Russian contract 1895 Winchester, its basically a stripper clip fed winchester that shoots mosin rounds and can mount a bayonet
Sad my friend... I pray your Country wakes up! I'm blessed to have a Constitution to PROTECT my God given RIGHTS from Government! Even thought they TRY to take it from us, it'll be from my COLD DEAD HANDS.
Airsoft gun replica sounds good, no? I mean, this type classic Rifle is very rare indeed. Even if we lucky I doubt it will not go for Restoration before place it at home as antique ornament. Kinda cool thou😂😂
Little fact when loading a henry 1860 rifle or modern reproduction be careful not to slam the mag tube follower on a round because if done so it can have enough energy to push the top round in the tube into another round possibly causing a round to detonate and this is possible with like I said the originals in 44 rim fire and any new reproduction in 44-40 and 45 colt
This is a great point and now that I've read it, it seems so obvious. I'm curious about how the rifle picks up the next round. When a round is fired and then extracted with the cocking lever, is there a spring or something in the loading tube that pushes the next round into place, like in a modern magazine? Or do you have to pull the loading slide down at the same time to pull the next round in?
Henry makes quality products. Missouri Walnut. The action on them is smooth as butter. Although I would never have the brass plated one because if I ever scratched it.. I would never forgive myself. :P
At least their products have a lifetime warranty. They make a lot of them out of steel or zinc and we have to be careful making the zinc parts because its easy to dent and scratch
Definitely a dream gun for me. Just elegant beauty and simple function. It’s too bad all the repro rifles are so much more expensive than the repro pistols.
I've heard it's not a good idea to load it with the barrel at a high angle, rounds banging against each other, even though the rounds are round nosed. Don't want to set one off. There's always a risk, and it really isn't worth it.
I have the Henry X in .357, it is a nice rifle, but Henry QC really needs some work. My sights were cut so crooked to the barrel, my rear sight had to be drifted way to one side to zero at 25 yards, then was a matter of feet off target the other direction at 100 yards. Had to get a mount from EGW and put a micro red dot on it. With that red dot, I'm on like Donkey Kong, able to get hits on steel silhouette out to 200 yards with a stout load and a little elevation holdover. I am apparently far from the only one with this issue from what I've seen online. Lots of barrels crooked relative to the receiver, which I was worried was my underlying issue, glad it was just the sights, I didn't care for them anyway.
They are indeed beautiful, but I'm not a fan of the lack of furniture on the magazine tube, mainly because I'm paranoid about touching a hot barrel. It's not a deal-breaker, it just removes a point or two for me.