sasamafia.blogg.se

Miroku 1892 manufacture dates
Miroku 1892 manufacture dates








You can tell that a lot of quality was put into assembling the gun and finishing it. Even the little carrier appears to be machined (you can see little lines on it). You don't get that feeling with the Winchester/Miroku gun. I own a few American made guns (Remington, Mossberg, Sig Sauer, Colt, Marlin) and while many of them are absolutely beautiful, I can tell where money has been sacrificed or parts have been cheapened to ensure that they stay below a certain price-point. The internal parts seem extremely well done, and I don't see any indication of stamped or cheap parts used anywhere. The wood, while often plain-looking compared to some of the Chiappas I have seen, is smooth and fits the metal very nicely, just a tiny bit higher around where the buttstock meets the action. The fit and finish of these guns is gorgeous. I wanted to write up a review from a guy who owns two of these new production guns in case somebody here is looking to purchase one. 44 through each, including some factory loads but mostly reloads. I have fired both of my Winchester 1892 rifles, putting a couple hundred rounds of. But now they're the most fun and interesting guns in my collection. Up until that point, I had never even handled a lever gun before. 44 mag and a "JM" Marlin 1894 Cowboy Limited in. By summer's end, I had three two Winchester 1892 short rifles in. I was working long, 12-hour shifts at a stressful job and my outlet was purchasing lever actions for some reason. My gun purchasing tends to be impulsive and I am not sure how, but the urge to acquire a lever-action rifle popped into my head and wouldn't go away. In July of 2014, I purchased a Winchester 1892 out of the blue. I initially found it after googling some stuff on 1892 rifles to see what kind of information I could gather.










Miroku 1892 manufacture dates