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Lovely; my favorite caliber too--I have an 1894 Deluxe, a Savage 1899 takedown, and a Martini Cadet in 25-35. The 99 and the Martini are 1;10" twist, the Winnie is in the original 1:8". Hard to say which shoots 117gr best; I think the 1:10's are better with the 100's. They all shoot the 110gr FTX well, better with factory than my reloads, so far. I've collected a number of early bullets for them; somehow the earlier bullets almost always shoot best with the earlier powders--go figger! Our head cheerleader in high school--she was also "First Runner Up" in the state Junior Miss competition, back in the 60's--shot her mule deer buck every year with a little saddle ring 25-35. Never had to pack one out herself, either.
windy
sonny, whar i growed up, "magnum" wuz another word fer "lousy hunter".
The 25-35 has a long and distinguished history in my family. My dad broke a horse and got one for doing it. It was all I hunted with as a kid. I killed a 7 foot grizzly with it when I was a kid, one shot between the eyes...
I had a Kettner or Kerner single shot that was in 25-35 it was prewar and a nice old rifle . We also have a CPA single shot with two barrels 25-35 and 38-55 that’s in full Pope Schuetzen regalia . I’m trying to talk myself out of it but I’m slowly loosing
Parkers , Mannlicher Schoenauer’s , 6.5mm's and my family in the Philippines !
A lovely rifle indeed! The Cowboy and Gunfighter Museum in Craig, CO has an 1885 in 25-35 with an original from the factory 12 or 14" barrel. Can't remember which. You'd have to get a tax stamp to do that today, but back in the day someone wanted a compact rifle and got it. Although, IIRC, it has a bull barrel on it, which means there's not that much weight savings over the original configuration. Still, a nifty little rifle. I REALLY like yours with the tang sight and long barrel. It must be a hoot to shoot!
Paul - in Pereira
"He is the best friend of American liberty who is most sincere and active in promoting true and undefiled religion." -- John Witherspoon
That's a great looking 1885! I especially like the full round barrel, takedown, and shotgun style buttplate. All those features were signs of when Winchester and other makers were making small changes to modernize the look of their older models. And the .25-35 and .25-36M were really great cartridges!
The most important aspect of this signature line is that you don't realize it doesn't say anything significant until you are just about done reading it & then it is too late to stop reading it....
Grand Poo Bah WA F.E.S.
In real life may you be the bad butt that you claim to be on social media.
Shrapnel wrote: ↑Tue Sep 06, 2022 4:42 pm
I found this 1885 in an auction site and had to get it. It has a bunch of stuff going for it, but I am a fan of 25-35.
All the features letter and the gun is in great shape. I hope to be shooting deer or antelope this fall with it.
That rifle went WAY PAST BEAUTIFUL . . . . still going too. Looks like the perfect field piece. Good Hunting
Nice rifle. If you get a chance to pick up some of the Hornady ammo with the Flex-Tip bullets give them a try. They worked good out of my sewer pipe for a barrel 1894. I contacted Hornady and they gave me some loads for that bullet with Lever powder let me know if you are interested and I'll post them.
elmo123 wrote: ↑Thu Sep 08, 2022 11:54 am
Nice rifle. If you get a chance to pick up some of the Hornady ammo with the Flex-Tip bullets give them a try. They worked good out of my sewer pipe for a barrel 1894. I contacted Hornady and they gave me some loads for that bullet with Lever powder let me know if you are interested and I'll post them.
Mike
I have another Winchester model 1894 and 25-35 and I will use the same ammunition I shoot in that rifle. The 117 grain round nose bullet continues to work exceptionally well at the distances I will be shooting this gun I don’t need anything that’s pointed or high ballistic coefficient.
Just lovely! I think that Colorado museum '85 carbine has a factory 14" barrel and lived behind bar for much of its life, according to Campbell's first volume on the Winchester Single Shot.
I was raised on the old myth that a .25-35 wouldn't kill deer reliably, but the next ranch had a lady who came in from town to hunt every season and always left with blacktail meat buck. She used a '94 .25-35 carbine made in the late 1940s. (You DO have to hit 'em someplace in the runnin' gear....).
Shrapnel,
Whenever you post your latest acquisition, you never disappoint.
This one is also a beauty.
I have two technical questions that I hope you will indulge.
1. How does one set the trigger with that arrangement? Is the rear set trigger offset or wider in any way to allow you to easily set it?
2. Your new single shot is also a takedown. Does the forend have any quick detach latch, and what mechanism locks the barrel? I assume the barrel is threaded into the receiver and there is some locking mechanism to keep it from unscrewing.
As I reviewed my post I may have answered #2. I see a serrated tab on the bottom of the forend just at the front of the receiver. That must be a takedown latch.
JRD wrote: ↑Sun Sep 11, 2022 12:51 pm
Shrapnel,
Whenever you post your latest acquisition, you never disappoint.
This one is also a beauty.
I have two technical questions that I hope you will indulge.
1. How does one set the trigger with that arrangement? Is the rear set trigger offset or wider in any way to allow you to easily set it?
2. Your new single shot is also a takedown. Does the forend have any quick detach latch, and what mechanism locks the barrel? I assume the barrel is threaded into the receiver and there is some locking mechanism to keep it from unscrewing.
As I reviewed my post I may have answered #2. I see a serrated tab on the bottom of the forend just at the front of the receiver. That must be a takedown latch.
Jason
I set the trigger by pushing the rear trigger forward when the action is open.
Mike Armstrong wrote: ↑Sat Sep 10, 2022 10:16 pm
Just lovely! I think that Colorado museum '85 carbine has a factory 14" barrel and lived behind bar for much of its life, according to Campbell's first volume on the Winchester Single Shot.
I was raised on the old myth that a .25-35 wouldn't kill deer reliably, but the next ranch had a lady who came in from town to hunt every season and always left with blacktail meat buck. She used a '94 .25-35 carbine made in the late 1940s. (You DO have to hit 'em someplace in the runnin' gear....).
Here's a picture of it. Definitely "SBR" at one time, but I believe it is now a "Curio and Relic" - at any rate it resides in the museum instead of being carried and used as designed.
25-35-bull-barrel-stubby-1885.jpg
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Paul - in Pereira
"He is the best friend of American liberty who is most sincere and active in promoting true and undefiled religion." -- John Witherspoon
Miroku (forgot whether Browning or faux Winchester) made a copy of that shorty single shot. Wish I had bought one when they were cheap. No real purpose but that never stopped me before.
I took the 1885 out last week and popped some prairie dogs at 100 yards with it. It will work on deer and antelope easily if I can hit a prairie dog with it...
What load did you use on them? (obviously it was "enough gun" )
I have another 25-35 in a 1894 takedown rifle. I have shot turkeys, deer and antelope with it. I continue to use the traditional 117 grain round nose bullet with IMR3031 powder and reproduce the original load with about 2100 FPS...
My brother has the old family model 64 in 25-35 and cornered the local market on Winchester brass and Hornady 117 RNL projectiles. I don't recall what powder he uses, but it gets the job done. Back in the day I took the old rifle and tested it prior to opening day. The accuracy with open sights was beautiful, but I never did get a shot while carrying that rifle. Anyway, that load is definitely up to the job - no matter what current "experts" say about obsolescence.
Paul - in Pereira
"He is the best friend of American liberty who is most sincere and active in promoting true and undefiled religion." -- John Witherspoon