Winchester Lever Action Development: Model 1873
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- เผยแพร่เมื่อ 4 ก.พ. 2025
- With the Model of 1873, Winchester was able to address the major remaining weakness of the Henry and 1866 rifles - the cartridge. The 1873 was introduced in tandem with the .44Winchester Center Fire cartridge (known more commonly today as the .44-40). This cartridge kept the 200 grain bullet from the .44Henry Rimfire round, but used a brass case (as opposed to copper) and was able to increase the powder charge from 28 grains to 40, for a substantial increase in velocity.
In addition, the Model 1873 used a lighter steel frame and introduced a sliding dust cover on the top of the action to help keep out dirt and debris. The centerfire nature of the cartridge made it possible to handled ammunition when a commercial source was not available (Winchester sold the reloading tools). The 1873 was available with a wide variety of options, including barrel and magazine lengths, buttstock and grips, sights, and fancy options like engraving. It would prove to be a massively popular weapon both in the United States and abroad, cementing Winchester’s position as the premier manufacturer of American repeating rifles.
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I'm reminded again what a valued possession that would be. While $35 would be around $700 today in terms of pure inflation, the median income in '73 was around $2.30/day, compared to around $220/day today. So relative to sacrifice of budget, it would be the equivalent of about a $3,000 rifle today. It's popularity despite it's cost is a reminder how much people valued their firearms.
Gun Sense (drmaudio) that's great to know about!
Your comment just made me realize it’s well worth buying a new one. I never took the income into it in the past. I might actually go out and buy a new Winchester now
They were absolute necessary pieces of equipment to many people of the day especially to those who lived outside of big cities and had to rely on themselves and their gear to survive.
With that cost it is reasonable to think theft was another way to procure this beautiful rifle or murder.
Except you also have to look at cost of living as well. Room and board for men was apparently like 6 dollars a month. Or 129 dollars today. Lol you can barely buy a tent for 1 today for that much money. Let alone room and board.
So you didn't need to worry about rent or food because it be payed off in 2 days if you were making average pay. I spend an entire month paying for rent and utilities. Let alone groceries.
My Winchester 1873 44-40 Carbine just turned 130 years (1891)young in 2021 and still functions and fires beautifully....even have an original 1873( 1881) cleaning rod kit that fits nicely in the butt stock! Love it 😊
If you can find them!
Its not finding the gun as much as finding the money
Today I learned there's a word for the sealing action of a brass case in the chamber, obturation. Thanks Ian!
I just want to thank the random guy on youtube that recommended this channel some time back, I cam across the comment, searched this channel, and have yet to be disappointed. Quality, informative, and endless videos. I could watch this stuff all day.
The world of firearms is so damn interesting. It's got a bit to do with everything, chemistry, engineering, woodworking, politics, etc. Seeing what comes of the production of these tools is fascinating.
@@hunterkiller7352 Yes that's it. The amount of funny looks and "oh what you want to be a serial killer or something?" you get when you say you find firearms interesting (especially being in the UK, like me). But yeah I always have to explain that there are so many more elements to it and quite rarely are people interested in firearms for sinister reasons as opposed to reasons you listed
@@liamcraddock9539 Painfully accurate. Kind of similar in my country. Here, although our gunmakers do just about everything, most gun people are just fudds or competition shooters. And most people just don’t care about firearms. And therefore, yeah- the “oh, you wanna be a mass murderer?” looks as you mentioned.
💥I`m from Argentina in Corrientes Province and all about these really rifles Winnchester`s models have made the real history of America......congratulations to you for the informations all about its..thank you. Jorge Fernando "Coco"GUTIERREZ
As someone who wants to become a gunsmith some day, I really like how he touches every detail of the history behind these weapons systems. Gonna make this guys channel my bible when I wanna learn more about a fire arm.
Good luck on the gunsmithing career. From an old gunsmith.
I cannot reccomend enough C&Rsenal and there gunsmith Mark Novak. They cover the history of firearms in waaaay more depth in roughly hour long videos, complete with xray animations made in house. Mark has his own youtube channel that covers techniques to resoration and preservation as well as some other areas in gunsmithing. He sometimes restores firearms for the main channel episodes.
I just found this video. Thanks. I have just disassembled and cleaned the internal parts in preparation to shoot my 1889 made 38-40 model 1873. My rifle has a 30" barrel and while it has lost much of it's original finish, it will be a good shooter. I have just received black powder ammo from Buffalo Arms Co and a magazine spring and a screw for the magazine tube from Homestead Parts. The firearm was very crusty internally but it still has fair rifling. It was part of a collection my siblings and I inherited from my father. My father never attempted to clean or shoot any of the many old firearms he had and would never let one of us whipper snappers touch them. I think he must have know us better than we did ourselves. Anyway, it is ready to go to the range and I can't wait.
I just love old rifles like that. Imagine all the people that owned it, took care of it, the stories it might have had and maybe even the people killed by it. Might be a bit morbid but it is really fascinating to me.
Mellisco As they say about the walls of a house; "Imagine if those walls could speak"
Just don't think of all the rifles who were neglected and left to rust =P
Oliver Winchesters daughter went nuts and built a house she said she was told to build to house the souls of those killed by her father's guns. You can visit the house today. It was featured on " Believe It or Not."
if we are being realistic most guns are likely never so much as pointed at another person let alone fired.
Likely carried around a farm, shot game, and mabey alot of empty cans
@@therideneverends1697 I was given a Winchester similar to the one in the video. I was staying in the top corner of Arkansas and was surrounded by woods and scrub for miles. I was eagerly anticipating some live meat rather than the usual hillbilly roadkill stew. My cousin who gave me the gun was pretty nonchalant about gun ownership as at around the age of 60 he'd had a gun since he was 6 years old, airgun of course. I thought of the old Winchester, with great affection, what an amazing piece of engineering!
Winchester '73. The AR-15 of its day.
1337penguinman but they didn’t have libtards trying to band it
Few years later built this in 10 Gage . Level up
Also it’s still probably the most beautiful rifle of its day
Shhh! don't say that too loud. Feinstein and others will try to have it banned.
Did you just call most westerners in the 19th century self entitled, clueless jackasses?
That full stock gun might be a little unwieldy, but It's the coolest of the three. I'd like to see a modern replica from somebody.
Ian, it ia always a pleasure to see your videos. Cousin Warren GAVE me a '73 in .38 WCF and my wife bought me a 1st generation Colt for a companion. Yes, I am doubly blessed!!
Beautiful rifles. Without a doubt my favourite long gun ever made.
Ian, great video and content as always and finally a gun that I actually own! However one mistake that is easily made is that 38WCF or 38-40 isn't a .38 caliber but rather a .401 caliber. Keep up the great work!
Came here to post the same thing...but part of my brain is also saying "hey...the 44-40 is really 43 caliber" and then I started thinking "and 38 is really .36" so then what? Sometimes I just want to get in a time machine and smack those old time cartridge namers!
@@akodo1 There should be laws about such things having to actually hold up to a measuring gauge.
Why does it say 38 on the barrel?
@@markrhuett The inside diameter of the case mouth is .38, the outside is roughly
.40. Other people have much longer and more detailed explanations than me.
@@korbetthein3072 That's a good explanation. Thank you.
Comes in three handy-dandy sizes, "Sensible", "Compensating", and "MORE DAKKA".
Sera kind of difficult to achieve proper DAKKA quantities with a lever action tho
At the point in time when bullets can pass through the interdimensional walls. When firepower takes up the entirety and eternity of space and time, all beings stuck in a neverending life and death cycle as bullets recover and destroy their bodies in quick succession. No one is able to think about anything but the sheer force of the bullets rapidly flying literally everywhere in the materium turning the warp itself into nothing but a sea of automatic weaponry.. Then there will be enough dakka. Or, at least almost.
shootier!
Yo tf is dakka
@@terminator572 You say that like it's a challenge for Orks to do that.
Always puts a smile on my face when I remember that Ian's a lefty! Im not alone!
That was one of the main reasons that I switched to lever guns: no preference for handedness.
From the producers of "Goldylocks and the 3 bears" comes the newest blockbuster,
"Ian and the 3 winchesters"
Sure it wasn't from the Producers of Battleship?`The dialogue seemed somewhat familiar, although facial expression and body language were leagues above that movie...
I didn't know about the .30WCF and the 30-.30. I haven't heard of the WCF .30 until now. Thanks for the knowledge Ian.
Great condition on those. Nice to see the three variations together. Custer didn't just get himself annihilated (which would, frankly, be no great tragedy- he was a big prima donna, Patton took lessons from him), he got 1/3 or 1/2 his regiment annihilated with him. Always listen carefully to the intel from your scouts. I'm guessing the 38-40 nomenclature must have gotten backward somehow and they had to stick with the typo. Everyone knows it's a 40 cal bore. Anyway, great video as always. Enjoying the Winchester history series. Thank you
To put cost into context, a cowboy earned somewhere between $25 and $40( depending on experience ). A '73 was a significant rifle and purchase but was popular. It was expensive but well worth it. This was the model that really made the Winchester brand after the success with the Yellow Boy '66. Winchester would make more than 720 ,000 '73s.
Really enjoying this series! I can't wait for the episode on the 1892!
Or the 1876 too.
Thanx to Ian some of our history will not become forgotten weapons , merely interesting. Well merely is the wrong word. When Ian likes, chooses, describes and disassembles a weapon it will not soon be forgotten.
Thanx Ian !
the last time I clicked so fast Ian was talking about the model 66
Oooooh that musket length model, I think Im in love.
The more firearms trends head in a tactical direction the more I desire one of these. They speak much more to craftsmanship than mere cookie cutter industrial manufacturing.
...And looking over the bullet ridden corpses of mamma bear and poppa, bear baby bear smiled uncertainly at Goldilocks, pushed his bowl of porridge away and didn't say a thing.
B. Hagedash wow where is this from
Rifle too big, too small, just right is where Hagedash got that from.
I do not think that in all his many thousands of videos Ian has EVER harmed a single animal willingly. He's not THAT sort of gun "enthusiast".
also it would be "riddled" not ridden.
The rifle arrived today and I dialed in the scope just a couple hours ago th-cam.com/users/postUgkxQt2uORDRfFOVSrO4idv4B90ThT6EOnEL . I haven’t shot with a scope in probably 25 years. The X on the left was my target. (the shot almost in the bullseye on the right X was my father in laws first shot after I made adjustments) The two shots circled are my first 2 shots. Then I brought it down - shot once. Then brought it over to the left. From there zeroed it in to dead center. This all was from 25 yards out. Follow instructions carefully when mounting the scope. So far I'm very happy with the purchase.
My '73 is a 200K series putting it at a 1888 production date and the Action still is still smoother then anything Henry or Uberti make today.
Why do you feel the need to come on here and make us all feel bad???
I have a 1901 production ‘73 with the 24” octagon bbl in .38 WCF (38-40). It’s in great shape..MY appraisal, and it will be handed down. LOVE it. Also have a ‘newer’ model ‘94 ((.30-30) produced mid-50’s, BOTH have pristine bores. Excellent vid, thanks...
One improvement of the 1873 over the 1866, was a system to prevent the rifle firing before the bolt was fully locked in battery. A small gravity dropped pin in front of the 1873's cartridge elevator would fall down during the completion of the lever cycle, preventing the rifle from firing out of battery.
Since it's gravity operated, does that mean it would not work if held sideways, vertically or upside down?
Can't really think of situations where you would do that sort of thing (shooting through a horizontal slit?), but it's an interesting thought.
@@Khrrck It won't work if the rifle is upside down. You'd have to be ripping really fast to get it to fail if you held it sideways, but the rifles lifter would probably kick the cartridge out before chambering it.
"The battle of Little Big Horn, where I...er, I mean Custer got annihilated...."
I always wondered where the Sioux obtained the bulk of their lever actions and if French Canadian trader's weren't working the friction for political reasons as much as for profit
As I understand it there was never really a unified Sioux military force until immediately before Little Bighorn, so the rifles would have been bought individually or in small groups. Probably didn’t arouse suspicion like buying 1000+ at once would.
riiiight!
Just bought an old Euroarms 1873 clone in .357 today. Looks like they did a pretty good job replicating it.
I knew where the intro was going, but I really enjoyed it. Keep up the great work Ian!
Loving this series Ian, keep it up man.
Up until 1879-ish the dust cover was an optional upgrade for a few cents more. I have personally bought an original 1873 mfg in 1875 without the dust cover option in .44 WCF. Very unusual and interesting that somebody wanted to save $0.70 on their $40 rifle.
well yeah. gotta save some money for ammo
Maybe you're putting too much throught into it? Perhaps the Original owner walked into a local hardware store and it was what was available? Probably said, I'll take it.
Ian. I really love lever guns. Your videos are always superb. Thank you for making so many outstanding videos. That is the military "outstanding" from a 27 year veteran.
Gun Jesus blesses us with his sacraments
Gundhi.
Waking up to an 1873 video by Ian, having my morning coffee and smoke just before I go to work at the gunshop. Life's good
So, is Ian... Gun-dielocks?
BADUM DISHHHKLUBLISHQUEUulishdishtishssssh!
Oops, dropped it....
Thank you.
Smooth as ex lax.
Gun Jesus, Gun-dielock... At this point, What difference does it make?
I'm glad you made the joke so that I didn't have to.
The Goldilocks introduction was an interesting change...
Dear Ian, the. 38-40 is actually chambered for a .401 in. diameter projectile, making it 40 caliber. Oops, looks like Himlow Odemire beat me to it. That's to be expected when you arrive to the party this late.
I’ve got one of these in .32-20, and I have yet to shoot it, thanks for the video, Ian!
My Winchester 1873 16 inch barrel just turned 150 years old
this is a great video to watch while floating a stock for my class rifle. thank you Ian.
Great video as always. I'm a bit disappointed you didn't go over how the dust cover worked, tho, since that seems to be the major mechanical difference from the 1866 :(
It’s so interesting to see the musket version.
Ian, you omitted perhaps the most striking fact about the Winchester '73. What was that, you ask? Winchester '73, a 1950 movie starring Jimmy Stewart was the first Hollywood film to permit a star to share in the profits! Stewart's agent was the legendary Lew Wasserman who negotiated a 50/50 split with the studio. The film was a hit and Stewart made buckets of money which was taxed as a capital gain, even further increasing Stewart's haul. The studios quickly realized their error, but the genie was out of the bottle. First rank stars, producers, and directors went from being exceptionally well-paid employees to wealthy people able to live off their capital for the rest of their lives. Can you imagine what James Cameron made from Titanic?
I always enjoy your videos!
If all the TH-camrs I was hoping you'd sell merchandise cause I would definitely buy some of it
shop.forgottenweapons.com
I know this is a old video and it really doesn’t matter but the 38-40 bullet was a 40 caliber bullet on 38 grains of powder. For what ever reason the nomenclature on the bullet is backwards of other calibers.
These videos are making me even more excited for red dead 2
Meh no PC version .... stupid Rockstar ...
Actually... Red Dead Redemption 2 is Red Dead 3. Don't forget Red Dead Revolver (the 1st one).
SubmarinerSix Well, I agree that no one remembers it, and that even Rockstar forgot about it...
I would disagree, rockstar didn't forget, they just knew that the majority of their current audience had never even heard of it. It was a rather good game, not great, but one that you would enjoy. It just didn't enjoy the same popularity as many other westerns did at the time like Gun, so fewer people had seen it in the first place.
Um Ian , the 38-40 is actually a .40 caliber round not a true 38 .
Another great great video/ history lesson
Thank you
I was just re-watching the lever action series (on the new History of Weapons and War app) and I caught a small oops by Ian. He said that the ‘73 was chambered in .38-40…which it was…but he said that was a .44-40 necked down to .38 caliber. Ian….you know the .38-40 is actually a .40 caliber bullet. For some reason, the nomenclature was reversed for this round. Not a major mistake, I know, but the small details are what matters. Love the new app, btw!!!
so $35 is around $600+ in todays value, it had a high volume of fire and was reliable and loved by its owners. it was the ar-15 of its day, Good thing dianne feinstein wasn't around back then.
NEPAscallywag Have you seen her? She looks like she predates this rifle a few dozen years
These hold more than 10 rounds though(!!!!1!), so she still wants it banned.
Over 130 year old technology and it's still too advanced for backwards antigunners.
Fun fact feinstein has been around sense queen Victoria!
And what do you need a AR - 15 for ?
Universal Kombat Like what ?
Ian is the best, my favorite channel after the great war. Gun Jesus for the win!
You can see a stock-cut version of the shorty used by Woody Strode (Once Upon a Time in the West) and Gina Torres (Firefly / Serenity).
Thanks for your review of the development of the Winchester lever actions. I hope you get to the later versions. What I would really like to know is if you can really add a set screw to the lever to make a rapid fire lever action? :)
Thanks. Pertinent survey info. My experience is the lever-action is the most comfortable German-Hand carry weapon available today. The Garand also fits this ease of carry.
7:20 The .38-40 was indeed a necked down .44-40, but it is not a "38 caliber" as stated, it is a .4005 caliber (or 10mm). The naming convention on this cartridge is sort of backward compared to the usual convention, for weird reasons.
That rifle length with the full stock is very appealing, I wish someone would make on of those.
The 44-40 cartridge sounds like it could be incredibly versatile in skilled hands, and a 15 shot magazine 🫢
I am enjoying this journey of Winchester lever guns. Thanks Gun Jesus.
nothing like a lever rifle
hidalguense d corazon by those 4 words you mean? there is no real discernable meaninf
@@dubsy1026 there is no gun which quite matches the elegance of a lever action rifle, it's not that hard
@@dubsy1026, five words, there are five words.
Apologies, I was probably feeling excessively quip-y at the time. It seems my enthusiasm got the better of me.
So did he say 4 words or was it 5? To tell you the truth, I was so engrossed I lost count too. You got to ask yourself, "do I go back or continue watching"?
Haha. Love that starting skit.
I hope you do a 'Guns from Red Dead Redemption 2' video like the one you did with battlefield 1
Adam Young researching it yourself would yield more useful info than a video with 15 different guns being the topic
Ian did the BF1 video's because he was an advisor for Dice on WW1 weapons.
Kruqtion The weapons in RDR2 are like the cars in GTA, they’re using fake names and are only close to the weapons they’re modeling. I’m pretty sure the Lancaster Repeater in game is the 1873 (“Lancaster” seems to be RDR2’s fake name for Winchester, considering the pump shotgun that seems to be an Winchester 1897 is also a Lancaster), and the Lichtfield Repeater is the 1860 Henry. The default repeater that’s all around camp and that you get first (I think called the Carbine Repeater) is an 1860 Spencer. The Evans is an Evans (I’m on PC, so not sure if console got the Evans).
@@TedMan55 the lancaster is a winchester 66
Lord Bear that’s what i see on the wiki, although given that the in game version is just inspired by the real thing, and that the 73 was mostly just a rechambering of a 66 for .44-40 and not significantly visually distinct, the artistic liberties in the game version probably overshadow any differences and makes it impossible to say what it actually is
"The Goldilocks Gun" -- Great intro Ian!
Dear Ian, you mention the Colt Frontier which was a revolver chambered in .44-40. Why did Winchester never make the 1873 rifle in .45 long Colt? Was it due to competition between the manufacturers or was it a mechanical issue which prevented this chambering?
Nathaniel, they make make that option now
The 45 Colt has a very narrow rim, not designed for extraction. While it may work fine in rifles today, with smokeless powder and modern brass, back in blackpowder days with weak balloon head cases, a 45 Colt rifle would not have been a winning concept.
Bullet is actually .401 diameter, not .38 nor .357.
Also, older gun sources claimed the taper of case was to facilitate chambering and extraction. The .38-40's bullet also supposedly had some ballistic benefits. The rims on the .38-40 and .44-40 thicker reportedly to limit shearing on extraction. Early cases of 'balloon head' type and softer. Modern gun writers question why Winchester didn't just chamber it for .45 Colt. (Uberti does it now but cartridge metallurgy now far superior.)Supposedly the thinner rims of the .45 Colt had concerns with shearing. This is also reason the .45 Schofield was designed with wider rims, and shorter chambers, to prevent an accidental .45 Colt insertion, since concern of cartridge extractors shearing or skipping rims. Anyway, that was what early 1900's gun writers were writing
Maybe you haven't got there yet, but i think you mentioned in the 1860 Henry video, that there was no half cock or safe way to carry this style of rifle with a round chambered. Do the Winchesters get that at some point?
My favorite of the Winchester series especially the octagonal barrel though I would really like to get a reproduction Musket version in either .44-40 or Smith and Wesson .44 magnum
It would be cool to see the reloading kit they sold back then.
Damn, I love the look of that stubby one. It looks so cool!
Great tutorial, thankyou!
Just looking through an old Sears. Roebuck (1897) catalog that I have, the 24 inch standard version 1873 that they have listed sold for $10.94.
These were not cheap rifles though I checked the inflation and at 50 bucks for its higher end before fancy options is equal to 1165 today. Admittedly back then on the frontier the rifle was very literally what separated life from death(considering even without having to defend it made the food dead enough to be dinner) it was certainly worthwhile expense. Probably as important as your Horse.
7:24 38-40 is a 40 caliber projectile over 38 grains of black powder.
I’m sure someone’s pointed it out already, but .38-40 is actually a .40 caliber. Ruger even offered a .38-40 .40 s&w and 10mm convertible vaquero at one point. Ballistically from a revolver it’s almost identical to .40 s&w.
regarding the henry mechanism, is the same mechanism used in the martini henry rifle or is it just coincidence?
I'd like to see the famous Chuck Connors winchester.
That cold open is cringey brilliance and I love it.
I love love love your Channel keep up the good work you always get my both thumbs up greetings from Slovenia I hope you visit someday
A gun that made 1,000 movies and TV shows should have 5 million views.
Lever action rifles possible some of my favorite guns
You're awesome Ian
why does the longest rifle, not have a magazine tube that match barrel length like the other 2 lengths?
skankstro used a magazine. .spitzer bullets can't be used in a tube
skankstro ooppss...was thinking of the 30 06 WW1 model. .my bag
deathofkindness I'm sorry I guess I wasn't clear with my question. the short and medium length Henry rifles (at least in the examples down here.) match the barrel length, right up to the edge. the "musket" length one doesn't, presumably to allow a bayonet. but he mentioned the Mexican police would get one with a magazine MUCH shorter for a bayonet. I wonder why in the example shown, the musket length seems to be a round short of matching
The musket used a socket bayonet, which required a couple inches of exposed barrel to mount.
Forgotten Weapons ah, thanks!
200 grain bullet at 1200fps is about the same as a hot 10mm auto. That's remarkably powerful for 1873.
Imagine if that guns could talk. What stories could they tell, mysteries could they solve, truths and lies they could depart.
That carbine just looks bad ass
Once you know how charcoal bluing is applied and how insanely difficult it can be to remove, you'll never fail to spot it on old guns.
The slow rust bluing on the barrel has reverted to brown as bluing does. The charcoal bluing however, on the hammer, kings gate and sight remain black.
So it's actually pretty straightforward. You whiten the parts (400gr polish), you tie a wire to the parts, you degrease the parts and you bury them in a vat of hot charcoal.
The 4-6" deep vat or pot is gently heated from below, the charcoal is allowed to smoke off any volatiles if it's fresh charcoal. If volatiles remain and the parts are added while the charcoal smokes, it'll try to color the surface with a blotched finish as case hardening does. Pro tip: Old man told me once charcoal is used for color case hardening, it's spent. Probably volatile gasses are what imparts color.
The charcoal isn't heated to glowing. That's too hot. It's heated to the point it is just barely starting to develop ash where wind hits it. It will not glow red on its own.
Bury the parts in so air currents don't get to them. Allow them to heat gently, they'll turn blue to blue gray. If they go gray, too hot. Better to let them slowly heat even if it takes longer, this is better as subtle amounts of air get to the char and steel and coat the steel in an oxide that is quite thick. Longer it sits, thicker the oxide gets, the more durable it becomes.
After 5 minutes, check your parts. If they're where you want them, either remove and cool or, if a darker color is desired, wipe the parts in Jojoba oil immediately while still searing hot. The parts will darken. Small parts are less apt to take a dark tone as they cool so quickly and this leaves them lighter shades of blue black.
Old charcoal blued parts that are rusted now, either suffered extreme salt exposure or the application was rushed and the oxide layer far far too thin.
The result is going to be an assortment of shades of blue black which for anything predating a temperature controlled kiln is correct.
If you want unauthentic uniform tones, you need a kiln, more importantly, a kiln with proper "carbonia" retort, pressed charcoal chunks and carbonia oil. Essentially "Carbonia" was the updated mechanical application of charcoal finish in an automated oven.
Very informative, thank you.
Yes, it's just right. Once the Browning mods were introduced the slickness went away.
I'll take the very short one thank you very much.
you are just right Ian.
I’m pretty sure black powder weapons are exempt from the NFA. You can buy them online and have them delivered at your doorstep
Yes, but this will also fire modern ammo. So doubt you can mail order a new production one.
Not black powder, but 'external ignition' guns like percussion caplocks or flintlocks. It just so happens that every gun whose ignitor is not integral to the ammunition cartridge uses black powder as the propellant.
@@BogeyTheBear Right, but a cap and ball revolver can be ordered to your door, then switch out the cylinder to a centerfire one. I'm not aware of any such system for a rifle like this.
Did they ever make them with color case hardened receivers or is that just a modern thing? Cause Uberti and WInchester offer those currently, but is that actually historically correct?
Case-hardening would have been an option. Bear in mind that modern _'color'_ case hardening is a superficial coloring job done with bluing solution brushed onto bright steel rather than genuine case-hardening (where the piece is fired in charcoal to drive carbon into the surface layer of the steel).
out of all winchester models the 1873s are the most beutiful.
One more since Ian mentioned the Little Big Horn fight. Part of the problem with the Springfields used by the 7th Cavalry was using ammunition with copper cases which caused problems for the troopers in that the case would get stuck disabling the rifle.
Case issues, sticking primarily but also ruptures where fairly common through the early 1900,s.
It's why the early rifles cartridges often had rather extreme tapers by today's standards (look at the .375 H&H).
That oversized claw extractor on the Mauser actually helped prevent tearing the case when one was stuck.
I wonder why the hexagonal barrel was a popular option over a round one?
you should cover the model 71
With the designs of the 1866 and 1892 bolt, it makes me wonder if a lever action with a rotating bolt like the Stoner designs would be an improvement.
will there be a video about the 1887 Shotgun?
No, not in this series.
How about the 1886? I have one in .38-56. Great rifle, expensive as hell to shoot though... .38-56 is about as common as hen's teeth.
I was just watching mixup98 about the one that was left leaning on a tree up in Nevada there. Pretty sweet.