This is why I love the guns of the Old West with a passion. The revolutionary technology that made these guns famous and legendary. The Colt Peacemaker and Winchester 1873 Model are my favourites. Thanks for showing how these guns work.
Looks quite reliable, robust and less prone to malfunction. The breech loading procedure, and cartridge ejection mechanism. Sets off alarm bells for myself. I wonder, what the recoil, is like. I worry about the spring degrading. I would be worried about malfunction. I can't understand the cocking mechanism. For myself, for maintenance. It's going to be too hard. I am not a regular shooter, so. I am thinking that. I would like to manufacture my own ammunition and gun in a slightly different way. To give, reliability. Something that's not, going to degrade over time. If it's locked away. Something, simple to service. Needing, perhaps ammunition that I might feel comfortable with storing in the home. And, if the gun was to fall into the wrong hands, perhaps something that's not going to be dangerous without a secret modification procedure!
It's interesting to me that there are 3 completely different systems (4, if you count the tube spring), almost running completely independently, and yet completely in unison.
Nice video...I own a .30-30 model 1894 (manufactured in 1957 so it's one of the "old" good ones)...great rifle, I still deer hunt and hog hunt with it and taught my two boys marksmanship and firearm safety with it (Funny story, my youngest boy and me were at a rifle range and I was teaching him how to zero a rifle so we start at 75 yards. I tell him to put a round in the middle of the target with the front sight in the middle of the rear sight, he does and I check it with the binoculars and I say ok now put another round in the exact same place, he fires and I look and don't see a 2nd hit and tell him I think you missed the target. When the range clears we walk out and get the target and he had split the paper inside his 1st shot with his 2nd. I started calling him Dead Eye after that).
To think that back in the day, these designers and gun makers had to make this by hand. Forge all of the necessary parts to perfection, without the use of computers, or drill presses, etc. Its really amazing what people could do back in the day, with such little technology.
Wow, this is genius to a first timer like me. The effect is simple, pull level to prime, pull trigger to shoot, load from the side. But actually each motion is moving complex pieces, and the barrel itself is a very deep magazine. I sorta expected it to be vertical but was like "No, not enough room." Now I get it. Though, I also find amazing that the gun isn't the cannon, the casing is. True of any gun, all you really need to fire is a pin to strike it.
Same idea by Luger parabelum.The knee has to by slightly above the line between two pins ,one atteceiver the other at the bolt. Beautiful mechanics.For Luger slightly below.
My Wife wanted to know how the "Rifleman's" Rifle Fired and Reloaded. This Video was an excellent tool to teach her (and anyone else). Excellent and thorough presentation.
interesting note: I think the bullets had to be blunt tipped for safety as if they were pointed, the recoil/impact of each shot could cause the point to end feed row of bullets, if they had hard points, to set each other off.
Nope. This is a common misconception of repeaters. Tests have been carried out by ballistc experts by even wacking the butt with a hammer with equivalent force of dropping the loaded rifle with a round in the chamber from shoulder height onto a rock or concrete. Even with "pointed" rounds and standard primers, nothing happened. The firing pin is much harder than a slug tip and the primer actually takes quit a bit of force to initiate the firing sequence. Blunt rounds save space in the barrel magazine; 1 extra round can save your life even if just boar hunting. I just realized you posted this 4 years ago, but I hope this dispells the urban myth for you.
@@michaelheurkens4538 interesting. thanks. but don't they have a term 'chain fire' to describe the recoil setting off bullets in a end to tip, tube magazine? ah well, the internet is full of myths, it does sound like the occurrence may be so rare, that when it did happen, it was variables other than a tube feed, pointed tip bullet magazine.
Thank you. I own an 1866. I could not figure out how the bullet was fed into the receiver with that tab blocking the path of all the bullets once fed into the magazine. Now I know.
Chuck Conners had a 44-40 Winchester rifle in the TV show The Rifleman. The rifle is a modified Winchester model 1892 that is able to fire when the lever is closed after a round has been chambered, which enabled him to rapid-fire the rifle without having to finger depress the trigger.
"Ghost gun!! ILLEGAL!! Bring me the head of Chuck Conners!! If nothing else, we have to get this TV show canceled! Eh? What's that? Oh, I see. False alarm, everyone. It's too old to be sensational on CNN. Let's just change our school curriculum to vilify this... Chuck. Conners."
Actually, all started around 1855 thanks to Smith & Wesson... not Winchester, not even Henry did invent the action. Absolutely. The revolutionary 'toggle-and-links' mechanical action was EXCLUSIVELY the idea of Smith & Wesson, of the 'Volcanic' firm. Benjamin T. Henry (five years later) and O. Winchester (even much later) brought improvements to the thing.
I understand Henry worked under Smith and Wesson in the 1850s (and Jennings before that?). He was an extraordinary engineer, but the Nelson King loading gate (and O. Winchester's business and marketing skill) really made the Winchester into the "gun that won the west." I'd love to see videos (like the one above) of the the Volcanic pistol, the 1860 Henry, and the 1866 Winchester. Would be fun to watch the evolution in progress.
When buying an original '73 always check for cracks in the forward link arm at the thinnest point, as they were prone to fatigue at that point and would eventually fail.
Just put a new stock on a 30-30 pre 64 Winchester. Originally used back east for dear hunting this rifle is the best for humping the bush. Anything in 25 yards is bullseye. Never fails. A masterful piece of engineering and a practical tool here in california.
After about 12-14 rounds it’s hot enough to cook an egg on. After watching so many shots fired, I realized there was no indication of just how hot it gets. Love mine, but I’m not sure what year it is, tries searching by serial # but could not find it listed 1106xxx
Brilliant channel. No stupid music. No annoying narration, just zooming in more and more on the fascinating mechanism of these guns.
But that's like saying no TV, no microwave, no refrigerator.
Mechanical masterpiece. Easy to see how it works after someone else does the work. Starting this from scratch was a daunting task.
This is why I love the guns of the Old West with a passion. The revolutionary technology that made these guns famous and legendary. The Colt Peacemaker and Winchester 1873 Model are my favourites. Thanks for showing how these guns work.
To think these were all designed by hand and drawn out on paper without CAD or any other computer aid is pretty awesome.
@@ColoradoStreaming ق٤غغث٣٣٤٢٤٢٤٤٢غغ٥٤٤٤٢غغ٤٢٤٢ع٢٤٤٢٣٤٢غ٢٣٢٢ت٢عف٢٣٢ف٤٢٤٤٤٢ع٤٢ع٤٤٤٢٢غع٢ععفقفففف٢ف٣ع٤ع٤٤قعقق٢٢٤٤٢٤غعغ٣٢٢تت٢ع٣٢عت٣
There’s something about this weapon … I just can’t the words to really describe it. It has this old world, rugged, rustic charm about it.
Idk maybe it's because the gun is from 1873?
Looks quite reliable, robust and less prone to malfunction.
The breech loading procedure, and cartridge ejection mechanism.
Sets off alarm bells for myself.
I wonder, what the recoil, is like.
I worry about the spring degrading.
I would be worried about malfunction. I can't understand the cocking mechanism. For myself, for maintenance. It's going to be too hard.
I am not a regular shooter, so. I am thinking that. I would like to manufacture my own ammunition and gun in a slightly different way.
To give, reliability.
Something that's not, going to degrade over time. If it's locked away.
Something, simple to service. Needing, perhaps ammunition that I might feel comfortable with storing in the home.
And, if the gun was to fall into the wrong hands, perhaps something that's not going to be dangerous without a secret modification procedure!
Eligent but prime
It looks simple now, yet it takes a geniuos mind to figure out a design like that. Impressive work of art.
Every gun is a work of art...but i think the most beautiful works of art were the gatling gun and the maxim gun
Pou
Agree!
it's so interesting to see how engineers at that time were capable to design such a masterpiece.
Yet they didn't have fancy degrees. Engineers to the core.
American innovation at its finest.
Poi
It's interesting to me that there are 3 completely different systems (4, if you count the tube spring), almost running completely independently, and yet completely in unison.
Fabrizio
lever actions are so satisfying
Yes
We have a 1948 Model 94 32 cal Winchester
Sweet little rifle, it was my Dad's 1st rifle
60ljgljgm307uoue
They really are....
Till you find yourself in a gun fight.
Simplicity in form and function, beauty in design and appearance.
Left hand right hand friendly. A brilliant and very intellectual design. So effective for the populace of that era.
Winchester, a work of art
Ahmad Zaki Damn right, a technological marvel for its age.
Ahmad Zaki Indian alarms
My two top favorite guns of all time the other being the Colt Single Action Peacemaker another iconic legendary gun that won the West
Ahmad Zaki yeah
Ahmad Zaki muy.buen.rifle
Nice video...I own a .30-30 model 1894 (manufactured in 1957 so it's one of the "old" good ones)...great rifle, I still deer hunt and hog hunt with it and taught my two boys marksmanship and firearm safety with it (Funny story, my youngest boy and me were at a rifle range and I was teaching him how to zero a rifle so we start at 75 yards. I tell him to put a round in the middle of the target with the front sight in the middle of the rear sight, he does and I check it with the binoculars and I say ok now put another round in the exact same place, he fires and I look and don't see a 2nd hit and tell him I think you missed the target. When the range clears we walk out and get the target and he had split the paper inside his 1st shot with his 2nd. I started calling him Dead Eye after that).
To think that back in the day, these designers and gun makers had to make this by hand. Forge all of the necessary parts to perfection, without the use of computers, or drill presses, etc. Its really amazing what people could do back in the day, with such little technology.
That's eerie just hearing the gun fire and reload in slow motion...
That's a sound that gives a gunsmith his skills.
Thats a hell of a lot more simple than i thought it was going to be. Brilliant design.
Wow, this is genius to a first timer like me.
The effect is simple, pull level to prime, pull trigger to shoot, load from the side. But actually each motion is moving complex pieces, and the barrel itself is a very deep magazine. I sorta expected it to be vertical but was like "No, not enough room." Now I get it.
Though, I also find amazing that the gun isn't the cannon, the casing is. True of any gun, all you really need to fire is a pin to strike it.
I thought the magazine was inside the stock. This somehow makes more sense.
@@WilfredIvanhoe The Spencer carbine had a magazine in the stock. Biggest problem was you had to remove the spring from the back to load it.
One of my favorite guns!! Never goes out of style.
It's incredable the way you load this weapon , really amazing .
And it had to be reliable and durable.
طحح
ظ.
اي
د
Same idea by Luger parabelum.The knee has to by slightly above the line between two pins ,one atteceiver the other at the bolt. Beautiful mechanics.For Luger slightly below.
Love how it’s so simple but yet complex if you think about it, a lot of movement with just the lift of a lever! 😎
I got a little nervous when the muzzle was swinging straight towards me while firing! Lol
TH-cam:
1873 : No
2020 : OK now recommend this.
i actually searched for this
@@tootaashraf1 same
Quarantine 2020
th-cam.com/video/sORDIbogq_Q/w-d-xo.html
@@ahmedalassar3459 same :D
My Wife wanted to know how the "Rifleman's" Rifle Fired and Reloaded. This Video was an excellent tool to teach her (and anyone else). Excellent and thorough presentation.
Was an 1892!🤠
I have a .22 Henry lever action rifle. Beautiful weapon.
I love it when the lever is cocked in slow motion
there is something enchanting in the mechanism of this masterpiece.
Simple mech but satisfying
Simplicity in perfection 😍
👍
Bought my first lever action rifle but have not fired it yet. This video helps me understand how it works and removes the mystery 👍
Ну Винчестер конечно красава!!!! Одним рычагом столько действий одновременно! Моё уважение!
د
.
ط
د
لاوالله ر،رى
interesting note: I think the bullets had to be blunt tipped for safety as if they were pointed, the recoil/impact of each shot could cause the point to end feed row of bullets, if they had hard points, to set each other off.
Nope. This is a common misconception of repeaters. Tests have been carried out by ballistc experts by even wacking the butt with a hammer with equivalent force of dropping the loaded rifle with a round in the chamber from shoulder height onto a rock or concrete. Even with "pointed" rounds and standard primers, nothing happened. The firing pin is much harder than a slug tip and the primer actually takes quit a bit of force to initiate the firing sequence. Blunt rounds save space in the barrel magazine; 1 extra round can save your life even if just boar hunting. I just realized you posted this 4 years ago, but I hope this dispells the urban myth for you.
@@michaelheurkens4538 interesting. thanks. but don't they have a term 'chain fire' to describe the recoil setting off bullets in a end to tip, tube magazine? ah well, the internet is full of myths, it does sound like the occurrence may be so rare, that when it did happen, it was variables other than a tube feed, pointed tip bullet magazine.
@@michaelheurkens4538 Watch Forgotten weapons video on his accident with a Henry rifle. It's possible, if highly unlikely.
what a brilliant simple design!.
Very simple design i might aswell make that at home
Thank you. I own an 1866. I could not figure out how the bullet was fed into the receiver with that tab blocking the path of all the bullets once fed into the magazine. Now I know.
Chuck Conners had a 44-40 Winchester rifle in the TV show The Rifleman. The rifle is a modified Winchester model 1892 that is able to fire when the lever is closed after a round has been chambered, which enabled him to rapid-fire the rifle without having to finger depress the trigger.
"Ghost gun!! ILLEGAL!! Bring me the head of Chuck Conners!! If nothing else, we have to get this TV show canceled! Eh? What's that? Oh, I see. False alarm, everyone. It's too old to be sensational on CNN. Let's just change our school curriculum to vilify this... Chuck. Conners."
I have a Navy arms clone of the rifle with a 30" barrel .. it holds 17 rounds! Mine is in the original 44-40 round and it is really fun to shoot.
Such a simple but elegant design.
Simplicity as a work of art.
That's the simpliest gun I've ever seen.
I love it.
I have one in my home, love my old winchester 😍
I love this mechanism. Simple and straitforward.
Man I love this rifle
I'm planning on building this gun out of legos
What a fantastic vid After watching it there was nothing I didn't know about these guns Thanks so much .....
I guess this was the "assault weapon" of the cowboys
Winchester gets the credit but it was the Henry repeating rifle that came first
Actually, all started around 1855 thanks to Smith & Wesson... not Winchester, not even Henry did invent the action. Absolutely.
The revolutionary 'toggle-and-links' mechanical action was EXCLUSIVELY the idea of Smith & Wesson, of the 'Volcanic' firm. Benjamin T. Henry (five years later) and O. Winchester (even much later) brought improvements to the thing.
I understand Henry worked under Smith and Wesson in the 1850s (and Jennings before that?). He was an extraordinary engineer, but the Nelson King loading gate (and O. Winchester's business and marketing skill) really made the Winchester into the "gun that won the west." I'd love to see videos (like the one above) of the the Volcanic pistol, the 1860 Henry, and the 1866 Winchester. Would be fun to watch the evolution in progress.
And some Indians.
@Judson Joist That's why they had such terrific factories!
This is my favorite to have around the ranch. No scope needed.
This looks fairly simple to make... Im gonna try it!😃
Very good video. Thanks 😃
The most interesting part to me was the loading of the gun in 0:35 - unfortunately this is shown in a bad camera angle.
Excellent work.
Are there any plans ?
Where will I find ?
The PlayStation 1 sound effects give me nostalgia
Unintended ASMR.
Best illustration of a machine at work.
Ali Masoumy
He didn't use any design program. This is 'World of Guns' on steam.
My grandad has one of these, it's such a beautiful gun
My most favourite gun, what ingenious idea to make this gun.
Guys try seeing the working mechanism in slow mo😍,just gorgeous. I love the releoading mechanism.
But i still love ak gas operated reloading
I recommend creating a video of the Winchester Model 1894. It is the most popular hunting rifle in American History
*ISSO É PRA QUEM É APAIXONADO POR WINCHESTER* 🇧🇷🇧🇷
EAE
I hate brazilians
@@bernie604 so why you dont do your president attack us and kill all of us your sick man
@@bernie604 Why so much hatred?
Bolsonaro 2019 👏👏👏👏🇧🇷🇦🇸🇮🇱
The masterpiece of engineering.
O rifle é uma arma magnífica, a melhor que já foram fabricado até hoje..🇧🇷🇧🇷👏👏👏👏👍🌹🥀🌷
When buying an original '73 always check for cracks in the forward link arm at the thinnest point, as they were prone to fatigue at that point and would eventually fail.
TH-cam:
2017: No...
2018: Nah...
2019: Not yet
2020: Let's recommend this
Thats crazy how we perceive it simply as the externals. Cool stuff when you learn how it works.
Blambloozler Yep, it’s simplicity is it’s mechanical genius.
Superb animation works. You man brilliant
ram krishnan its From a mobile game
thedogefogx420 thedogefox420 you can use world of guns on mobile too?
hi
its a game on facebook
he just recorded the animation of the game on facebook he didnt made those himself
Best descriptive video I've seen! ..
Program's (game actually) called "world of guns disassembly" available on steam. There are many types of guns to look through
Also in PlayStore
too bad that they're hidden behind a pay wall
@@Max200012 don't forget a ton of grinding.
Animation on how guns work is truly fascinating and interesting
That's pretty genius actually
Excellent! Similar to my Original Henry 1860. Thank you for the effort to create and post this.
Спасибо за визуализацию. Долго же я ум ломал, чтобы представить как это работает.
помпа надежней
I loved my old Winchester wish still had it.. Fun toy
This is probably how the guns in Red Dead 2 are animated with all those "details "
The person make this gun must be a genius
anyone here came after watching Diresta restored this kind of rifle?
No. But that's where I'm going now.
My a relative have Winchester model 32-40 ,1891 make it work very well and smoothly after more than 110 years 😍👌👌
I dont think they ever made a model 91, maybe it's a model 92?
gonna make one of these after i get out of machining school!😃
You make one yet?
No... I made a single shot 22 cal.... I wanna go shoot it but all the ranges are closed cuz of covid 19.😕
Winchester is one of my favourite type & thanks for posting
Все гениальное просто!
K Chemoo Peezdish Bliaa ?
John Browning design... the man was A GENIUS
No, he designed the 1886,1892,1894,1895 though for sure
-No one:..
-TH-cam: How a Winchester 1873 works
I asked for it
I looked this up
Shut up
Favorite 19th century gun
Ahhh, old times when no one has yet thought of using gas operated piston for reloading automation
I could watch that all day
Alot of ammunition was used in the making of this video.
Just put a new stock on a 30-30 pre 64 Winchester.
Originally used back east for dear hunting this rifle is the best for humping the bush. Anything in 25 yards is bullseye. Never fails. A masterful piece of engineering and a practical tool here in california.
Killer!
Well damn, I’ve always wondered bout how these kind of guns work
James Stewart film about the Winchester 73 was awesome
Can't wait to use this in RDR 2! Only 5 days till release!
I love how the casings literally fly into space at the speed of light
Fantástico...legal.legal.essa arma tem .158.anos.de.fabricacao.e.ate.hoje.e.fabricada..e.copiada....Parabéns.aos...Americanos.uuuaaau..!!!
всегда было интересно как работает это ружьё. как терминатор перезаряжал. наконец таки узнал.
How to make this gun..pls
sagik mateng im here for that too
you make these part and make them Into One briliant firearm.
world of gun play store
morgan petersen l
Derek Woodman you?
Beautiful animation....well done showing each component. 👍🏻🇦🇺
Its a game
My respect for Sitting Bull, Crazy Horse and Jeronimo mans with honor.
Marcelo Rondan the Indians mostly used the henry rifle. A very beautiful and similar model
Men is plural for man.....
It’s Geronimo no jeronimo
Создать такую простую и функциональную машину мог только гений!!!
اللهم صلِ على عبدك ورسولك محمد وعلى آل محمد
خالد نجم Ra if
Wtf this comment
Allahu Akbar
I love the bullets falls out mechanism that below the gun
Saw this gun in Resident Evil: Extinction yesterday and this video is in my recommend list. Wow cool...
I think its kinda scary when things like that happen
@@tomtomtom6970 Yeah.
I'm satisfied just watching it work
Лучший контент. Чисто зашёл в игру и сделал пару клипов с разных ракурсов.
Very nice video that answers a lot of questions.
mechanics to fall in love with
After about 12-14 rounds it’s hot enough to cook an egg on. After watching so many shots fired, I realized there was no indication of just how hot it gets. Love mine, but I’m not
sure what year it is, tries searching by serial # but could not find it listed 1106xxx