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Worth about 50 cents if you ask me. If it is a 1918 manufactured rifle it has been rebarreled or rechambered. 357 magnum out of the older recievers strikes me as askin for trouble. Could be wrong but well saftey first. Back to the point at hand it is clearly not an original takedown from 1918. 357 magnum didn exist till at least a decade later.
I dont know what the remodeled gun is worth, but get real, it aint worth $5,000s, but I would give a whole lot of .50 cent pieces for it. That gun looks to me like a real professional gunsmith did it and I think he knew what he was doing. I had a similar winchester 92 octogon barreled rifle done over 30 years ago and it turned out well. Mine I had bought when I was about 15 years old back in 1956. It looked like it had been sitting under a chicken coop for 40 years. It was in 25-20 with a very bad bore. Back in about 1975 I had it totaly restored, sent the barrel I think to either ward coozer or bain & davis and rerifled. I found new wood and had a gunsmith friend (Bill Choats) bush the fireing pin and put the gun together and blue it after a close buddy meticulesly polished it. I stupidly traded it or sold it. That gun looked like the factory made it yesterday! The 92 action is proven and I am sure its safe for .357 even way back. People tell me the 92 is stronger than the 94! Right now I have a browning 92 in .44 mag and a puma in .357. A guy I know has a beauty pretty much like that one on gun broker converted to .256 winchester mag. Thats what I would like another in!
Not worth $5000 but it was likely a .25-20 take-down converted and with the other work (re-blue, engraving, inlay). Neat gun but for the price. The .357 Mag is likely at the limit for the old metallurgy. I've seen .44 Mag conversions that were battered from use. How many rounds that took was unknown but probably less than 1000. The .357 Mag has lots less breech thrust and is likely ok but bears examination. I wonder how much it would cost Steve Young to duplicate. I like it.
Sincerely,
Hobie
"We are all travelers in the wilderness of this world, and the best that we find in our travels is an honest friend." Robert Louis Stevenson
Proud to be Christian American and not ashamed of being white.
May your rifle always shoot straight, your mag never run dry, you always have one more round than you have adversaries, and your good mate always be there to watch your back.
Because I can!
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I asked steve if he could do a takedown version and he declined. I would love to have my 92 (357) as a takedown. I haven't pursued it with other Smiths, not knowing of many that would do that. I also asked WWG if they would do it and they said no too.
Mike Johnson,
"Only those who will risk going too far, can possibly find out how far one can go." T.S. Eliot
It was probably an original TD rifle, but it was "bubba-ized" into a carbine of sorts. I don't like the gawdawful ramp on the short barrel, or the overpolished blue job. I don't care who made it, it isn't the opener to me.
"Congressmen who willfully take actions during wartime that damage morale, and undermine the military are saboteurs and should be arrested, exiled or hanged"....President Abraham Lincoln
rjohns94 wrote:I asked steve if he could do a takedown version and he declined. I would love to have my 92 (357) as a takedown. I haven't pursued it with other Smiths, not knowing of many that would do that. I also asked WWG if they would do it and they said no too.
See Mike Hunter.
Griff,
SASS/CMSA #93
NRA Patron
GUSA #93
There is a fine line between hobby & obsession! AND... I'm over it!!
No I ain't ready, but let's do it anyway!
pokey, I just now seen your picture and post on your converted 92. Except for the front sight and wear, that gun looks like the same rifle I had converted in the early 70s in california. I stupidly sold it at a gun show. Just wondering if it found its way to washington?!
Do you have a problem with those straight walled 357 cases "stovepiping" in you cartridge guides when you are chambering live rounds or ejecting empties?
Booger Bill wrote:pokey, I just now seen your picture and post on your converted 92. Except for the front sight and wear, that gun looks like the same rifle I had converted in the early 70s in california. I stupidly sold it at a gun show. Just wondering if it found its way to washington?!
maybe so,maybe so.
she has some plug screws in the top barrel flat, [old scope mount]
that sound familiar?
Gun Smith wrote:Do you have a problem with those straight walled 357 cases "stovepiping" in you cartridge guides when you are chambering live rounds or ejecting empties?
no stovepipes, the thing she does is sometimes a cartridge will bind up going into the chamber.
if i feed her 38 brass she's happier.
Mike D. wrote:It was probably an original TD rifle, but it was "bubba-ized" into a carbine of sorts. I don't like the gawdawful ramp on the short barrel, or the overpolished blue job. I don't care who made it, it isn't the opener to me.