I'm a 94 fan, but I have to ask...
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- Levergunner
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I'm a 94 fan, but I have to ask...
I understand that the toggle-link mechanism of earlier Winchesters was too weak for the smokeless propellent used in the 30-30, but I don't see why Winchester ( J. M. Browning) had to design an entirely new rifle to fire it. They had the relatively small 92 for revolver rounds and the giant 86 for rifle rounds, why didn't they redesign the 86 with a midsize receiver for the 30-30? I don't know if it's true, but I think I remember reading somewhere that the 92 is strong enough for the 30-30, it's just too short. A midsize 86 sounds like the perfect, obvious, much more simple solution, so what am I missing?
There's two kinds of lever action rifles - those designed by J.M. Browning, and those that are inferior.
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Re: I'm a 94 fan, but I have to ask...
I think a midsize, between a '86 and a '92, would be the cat's meow! 

Re: I'm a 94 fan, but I have to ask...
i have to agree. I would buy at least one!
Mike Johnson,
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Re: I'm a 94 fan, but I have to ask...
THE ORDERS TO JOHN M. BROWNING WERE SPECIFIC: MR BROWNING , YOU WILL DESIGN AN ACTION EXACTLY THE SIZE AND THICKNESS OF THE MODEL 1892 BUT IT MUST HAVE A BOLT THROW LONG ENOUGH TO CYCLE THE NEW SMOKELESS HIGH PRESSURE FLAT SHOOTING CARTRIDGES WE ARE GOING TO INTRODUCE.
RIDE, SHOOT STRAIGHT, AND SPEAK THE TRUTH
- Buck Elliott
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Re: I'm a 94 fan, but I have to ask...
Browning's relationship with Winchester demanded that he produce patentable models. JMB 'created' many more prototypes for Winchester that did NOT see production, than those that Winchester marketed. The idea was to cover all possible bases with PATENTS, making it difficult for the competition to introduce something not already covered by a Browning patent.
He succeeded admirably.
FWIW, the '94 IS sized somewhere between a '92 and the '86, and not nearly as strong as either.
He succeeded admirably.
FWIW, the '94 IS sized somewhere between a '92 and the '86, and not nearly as strong as either.
Regards
Buck
Life has a way of making the foreseeable that which never happens, and the unforeseeable, that which your life becomes...
Buck
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- J Miller
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Re: I'm a 94 fan, but I have to ask...
The Browning designed Winchester 1894 / 94 is as strong as it needs to be. Nuf said.Buck Elliott wrote:Browning's relationship with Winchester demanded that he produce patentable models. JMB 'created' many more prototypes for Winchester that did NOT see production, than those that Winchester marketed. The idea was to cover all possible bases with PATENTS, making it difficult for the competition to introduce something not already covered by a Browning patent.
He succeeded admirably.
FWIW, the '94 IS sized somewhere between a '92 and the '86, and not nearly as strong as either.
Joe
***Be sneaky, get closer, bust the cap on him when you can put the ball where it counts
.***

Re: I'm a 94 fan, but I have to ask...
If you ever find yourself in the Salt Lake City area, the Browning Museum is in the old train station in Ogden. Many of his inventions that never went into production are there. Winchester seemed to have been in the habit of buying his designs with no intention of producing them, to keep them out of the competitions hands.Buck Elliott wrote:Browning's relationship with Winchester demanded that he produce patentable models. JMB 'created' many more prototypes for Winchester that did NOT see production, than those that Winchester marketed. The idea was to cover all possible bases with PATENTS, making it difficult for the competition to introduce something not already covered by a Browning patent.
He succeeded admirably.
FWIW, the '94 IS sized somewhere between a '92 and the '86, and not nearly as strong as either.
Re: I'm a 94 fan, but I have to ask...
They messed up big time though when they didn't pony up for the A-5.Warhawk wrote:If you ever find yourself in the Salt Lake City area, the Browning Museum is in the old train station in Ogden. Many of his inventions that never went into production are there. Winchester seemed to have been in the habit of buying his designs with no intention of producing them, to keep them out of the competitions hands.Buck Elliott wrote:Browning's relationship with Winchester demanded that he produce patentable models. JMB 'created' many more prototypes for Winchester that did NOT see production, than those that Winchester marketed. The idea was to cover all possible bases with PATENTS, making it difficult for the competition to introduce something not already covered by a Browning patent.
He succeeded admirably.
FWIW, the '94 IS sized somewhere between a '92 and the '86, and not nearly as strong as either.
Byron
Re: I'm a 94 fan, but I have to ask...
No doubt that the 94 action is strong enough for the 30-30 family of cartridges. It's just not as slick as an 86 or 92 and therein lies the difference. If there were an 86/92 style action designed around the 30-30 and its offspring, you would definitely be able to cycle it quicker than a 94. That's just my opinion though.
Re: I'm a 94 fan, but I have to ask...
I heard reports (though I'm not sure if they were based on factual evidence), that the '86 and '92 actions were reported to Winchester as freezing up in the northern climates...especially the Alaskan wilderness. The looser '94 had less of a tendency to do so in extreme conditions.
Ed
Ed
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- Levergunner
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Re: I'm a 94 fan, but I have to ask...
Like the name of the thread says, I definately like the 94, so don't get me wrong on that one. But I have to admit, the 92 is better looking and smoother cycling. I just wonder why Browning saw it fit to design a whole new rifle rather than change the scale of an existing model.
There's two kinds of lever action rifles - those designed by J.M. Browning, and those that are inferior.
- J Miller
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Re: I'm a 94 fan, but I have to ask...
I've lived with the 94 Winchester for over 40 years. You can cycle the actions on them just as fast as you want to. The reasons have already been mentioned. They are just different. I cannot understand why people dis the 94s just because they are different from the 92 and 86. They are an ingenious design. Put a long cartridge in a short space. Did you know the 94 receiver is less than an inch longer than the 92s, and yet the 30-30 is almost twice as long as the 44-40?
The 94s are mechanically simpler than 92 and 86, did you know that?
Did you know there are several advantages to the link that opens the bottom of the receiver, besides shortening the action?
First, what might fall into the top, will fall out the bottom - sort of self cleaning. With a 92 or 86 what falls in the top stays in until you take the gun apart to clean it.
Second, with the appropriate tooth brush you can clean the inside of the 94s action from both the top and the bottom. Try that with a 92 or 86.
Third, and this is the most important, you can easily lube every single moving part of a 94s' internal action without taking it apart. The 92 and 86 isn't quite so easy.
I really wish folks would quit comparing the two designs. It's really like comparing apples to oranges.
Joe
The 94s are mechanically simpler than 92 and 86, did you know that?
Did you know there are several advantages to the link that opens the bottom of the receiver, besides shortening the action?
First, what might fall into the top, will fall out the bottom - sort of self cleaning. With a 92 or 86 what falls in the top stays in until you take the gun apart to clean it.
Second, with the appropriate tooth brush you can clean the inside of the 94s action from both the top and the bottom. Try that with a 92 or 86.
Third, and this is the most important, you can easily lube every single moving part of a 94s' internal action without taking it apart. The 92 and 86 isn't quite so easy.
I really wish folks would quit comparing the two designs. It's really like comparing apples to oranges.
Joe
***Be sneaky, get closer, bust the cap on him when you can put the ball where it counts
.***

Re: I'm a 94 fan, but I have to ask...
It may have been an attempt to control production cost. Most of the changes since then have been for that reason.
The man who invented the plow was not bored. He was hungry.
Re: I'm a 94 fan, but I have to ask...
Not really a comparison, Joe, more of a case of wishful thinking. Granted, the '94 is much easier to clean, but having the guts fall out of the action every time you cycle it takes some getting used to. I seldom use my 7-30, instead gravitating to an '86 or '95 Winchester. A pound or two heavier, but solid security when it counts. It's merely a matter of preference, and very little else. 

"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
- Buck Elliott
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Re: I'm a 94 fan, but I have to ask...
""If you ever find yourself in the Salt Lake City area, the Browning Museum is in the old train station in Ogden. Many of his inventions that never went into production are there. Winchester seemed to have been in the habit of buying his designs with no intention of producing them, to keep them out of the competitions hands.""
I grew up in Ogden. I've spent literally MONTHS at the Browning Museum; first, when it was located at the (John M. Browning) National Guard Armory, and later, after it was moved to the Union Depot. Same with the Browning Gallery at the Cody Firearms Museum.
Read my other post...
I grew up in Ogden. I've spent literally MONTHS at the Browning Museum; first, when it was located at the (John M. Browning) National Guard Armory, and later, after it was moved to the Union Depot. Same with the Browning Gallery at the Cody Firearms Museum.
Read my other post...
Regards
Buck
Life has a way of making the foreseeable that which never happens, and the unforeseeable, that which your life becomes...
Buck
Life has a way of making the foreseeable that which never happens, and the unforeseeable, that which your life becomes...
Re: I'm a 94 fan, but I have to ask...
AND IT WAS CHEAPER TO BUILD THAN THE 86 AND 92J Miller wrote:I've lived with the 94 Winchester for over 40 years. You can cycle the actions on them just as fast as you want to. The reasons have already been mentioned. They are just different. I cannot understand why people dis the 94s just because they are different from the 92 and 86. They are an ingenious design. Put a long cartridge in a short space. Did you know the 94 receiver is less than an inch longer than the 92s, and yet the 30-30 is almost twice as long as the 44-40?
The 94s are mechanically simpler than 92 and 86, did you know that?
Did you know there are several advantages to the link that opens the bottom of the receiver, besides shortening the action?
First, what might fall into the top, will fall out the bottom - sort of self cleaning. With a 92 or 86 what falls in the top stays in until you take the gun apart to clean it.
Second, with the appropriate tooth brush you can clean the inside of the 94s action from both the top and the bottom. Try that with a 92 or 86.
Third, and this is the most important, you can easily lube every single moving part of a 94s' internal action without taking it apart. The 92 and 86 isn't quite so easy.
I really wish folks would quit comparing the two designs. It's really like comparing apples to oranges.
Joe
ITS ALL ABOUT THE MONEY!
LETS GO SHOOT'N BOYS
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Re: I'm a 94 fan, but I have to ask...
"Cheaper to build...?"
Only because it was easier to machine, internally, having an 'open bottom.'
"Cheaper...?"
Yup. Definitely.
"Mechanically Simpler...?"
Not Hardly!
Only because it was easier to machine, internally, having an 'open bottom.'
"Cheaper...?"
Yup. Definitely.
"Mechanically Simpler...?"
Not Hardly!
Regards
Buck
Life has a way of making the foreseeable that which never happens, and the unforeseeable, that which your life becomes...
Buck
Life has a way of making the foreseeable that which never happens, and the unforeseeable, that which your life becomes...
- J Miller
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Re: I'm a 94 fan, but I have to ask...
So what's more complicated about it then?Buck Elliott wrote:"Cheaper to build...?"
Only because it was easier to machine, internally, having an 'open bottom.'
"Cheaper...?"
Yup. Definitely.
"Mechanically Simpler...?"
Not Hardly!
Joe
***Be sneaky, get closer, bust the cap on him when you can put the ball where it counts
.***

Re: I'm a 94 fan, but I have to ask...
Did he ever, but that's a whole nother story.arjunky wrote:They messed up big time though when they didn't pony up for the A-5.Warhawk wrote:If you ever find yourself in the Salt Lake City area, the Browning Museum is in the old train station in Ogden. Many of his inventions that never went into production are there. Winchester seemed to have been in the habit of buying his designs with no intention of producing them, to keep them out of the competitions hands.Buck Elliott wrote:Browning's relationship with Winchester demanded that he produce patentable models. JMB 'created' many more prototypes for Winchester that did NOT see production, than those that Winchester marketed. The idea was to cover all possible bases with PATENTS, making it difficult for the competition to introduce something not already covered by a Browning patent.
He succeeded admirably.
FWIW, the '94 IS sized somewhere between a '92 and the '86, and not nearly as strong as either.
Byron

Rob
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!
Never grow a wishbone where a backbone ought to be.
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!
Never grow a wishbone where a backbone ought to be.
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- Levergunner 2.0
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Re: I'm a 94 fan, but I have to ask...
Instead of the Big Bore 94 I wonder what would have happened if they used a 1886 action with a 45-70 necked to 30 cal and put a 30 cal barrel on it? Sounds like something JD Jones would do. I think it would have surpassed the 308 Marlin Express or 307 Win in performance. But it wouldn't be as light and handy as the 94. Also the 30-30 or 30-30 Imp will work just fine within the range of iron sights. As it is my eyes can't see as well as the 30-30 can shoot.
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Re: I'm a 94 fan, but I have to ask...
How about a 95, only using the 405 case and a 30 caliber bullet! The 30-70 would be a wicked lever round!!! What would that be compared to, a 30-06?
SASS#43836
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Re: I'm a 94 fan, but I have to ask...
It's called the 30-40 Krag, or the .303 British.shawn_c992001 wrote:How about a 95, only using the 405 case and a 30 caliber bullet! .......
Ed
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Re: I'm a 94 fan, but I have to ask...
Ha, I was wondering who would catch that!!!
SASS#43836
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Ain't easy havin' pals.
- Buck Elliott
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Re: I'm a 94 fan, but I have to ask...
SMOKELESS POWDER was the reason for the '94 Winchester, even though the boys at New Haven hadn't figured out just HOW... Took 'em a while.
Higher pressure and velocity from a smaller cartridge was the goal.
Browning and Winchester made it happen.
Higher pressure and velocity from a smaller cartridge was the goal.
Browning and Winchester made it happen.
Regards
Buck
Life has a way of making the foreseeable that which never happens, and the unforeseeable, that which your life becomes...
Buck
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Re: I'm a 94 fan, but I have to ask...
What he said. Also, it was only about 15 months or less IIRC from instructions to patent. Remember, Mr. Winchester was primarily a financier & marketing type. "NEW" sells better than "Improved", even in the 1890's.Terry Murbach wrote:THE ORDERS TO JOHN M. BROWNING WERE SPECIFIC: MR BROWNING , YOU WILL DESIGN AN ACTION EXACTLY THE SIZE AND THICKNESS OF THE MODEL 1892 BUT IT MUST HAVE A BOLT THROW LONG ENOUGH TO CYCLE THE NEW SMOKELESS HIGH PRESSURE FLAT SHOOTING CARTRIDGES WE ARE GOING TO INTRODUCE.
Something was right... they sold over 7 million during their production. For a non-military gun, that's unheard of. End of discussion.

Griff,
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- Levergunner
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Re: I'm a 94 fan, but I have to ask...
I think Griff may have a point. From a marketing standpoint, the 30 WCF will look more impressive if it's had a new rifle designed just for it.
There's two kinds of lever action rifles - those designed by J.M. Browning, and those that are inferior.
Re: I'm a 94 fan, but I have to ask...
No Doubt it was about the money. Especially considering the cost of setting up manufacturing equipment to produce a levergun like the 94 at a price that the buying public could afford to buy in the volume that it did. Don't forget--they could produce with the same kind of precision back then, but they had no inkling of anything like CNC equipment, just-in-time inventory, or any other cost-saving innovations. A longer 92 would have required a lot more manufacturing tooling than the 94, at a higher cost to the average buyer.RIHMFIRE wrote:AND IT WAS CHEAPER TO BUILD THAN THE 86 AND 92J Miller wrote:I've lived with the 94 Winchester for over 40 years. You can cycle the actions on them just as fast as you want to. The reasons have already been mentioned. They are just different. I cannot understand why people dis the 94s just because they are different from the 92 and 86. They are an ingenious design. Put a long cartridge in a short space. Did you know the 94 receiver is less than an inch longer than the 92s, and yet the 30-30 is almost twice as long as the 44-40?
The 94s are mechanically simpler than 92 and 86, did you know that?
Did you know there are several advantages to the link that opens the bottom of the receiver, besides shortening the action?
First, what might fall into the top, will fall out the bottom - sort of self cleaning. With a 92 or 86 what falls in the top stays in until you take the gun apart to clean it.
Second, with the appropriate tooth brush you can clean the inside of the 94s action from both the top and the bottom. Try that with a 92 or 86.
Third, and this is the most important, you can easily lube every single moving part of a 94s' internal action without taking it apart. The 92 and 86 isn't quite so easy.
I really wish folks would quit comparing the two designs. It's really like comparing apples to oranges.
Joe
ITS ALL ABOUT THE MONEY!
Re: I'm a 94 fan, but I have to ask...
NOPE, you are all wrong. The 1886 was the big one and the 1892 was the small one. How could they market a mid-size with a model number that was 1894. We would never be able to figure it out and factory orders would always be getting messed up thinking that the mid-size should be the middle number model.
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Re: I'm a 94 fan, but I have to ask...
Huh.......?!?SJPrice wrote:NOPE, you are all wrong. The 1886 was the big one and the 1892 was the small one. How could they market a mid-size with a model number that was 1894. We would never be able to figure it out and factory orders would always be getting messed up thinking that the mid-size should be the middle number model.
Regards
Buck
Life has a way of making the foreseeable that which never happens, and the unforeseeable, that which your life becomes...
Buck
Life has a way of making the foreseeable that which never happens, and the unforeseeable, that which your life becomes...
Re: I'm a 94 fan, but I have to ask...
SJPrice wrote:NOPE, you are all wrong. The 1886 was the big one and the 1892 was the small one. How could they market a mid-size with a model number that was 1894. We would never be able to figure it out and factory orders would always be getting messed up thinking that the mid-size should be the middle number model.



Chad
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Re: I'm a 94 fan, but I have to ask...
SJPrice wrote:NOPE, you are all wrong. The 1886 was the big one and the 1892 was the small one. How could they market a mid-size with a model number that was 1894. We would never be able to figure it out and factory orders would always be getting messed up thinking that the mid-size should be the middle number model.
Smith & Wesson had a simlar problem with the Mod one, followed by the Mod two and then the Mod one and a half.

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Re: I'm a 94 fan, but I have to ask...
Maybe the gun makers should adjust the calendar to reflect their model numbers.
And you dummies think you're confused NOW...
How do you manage to keep track of inches, feet, yards, rods, furlongs, miles, leagues, knots, hands, cubits, spans, and centimeters...?
And you dummies think you're confused NOW...
How do you manage to keep track of inches, feet, yards, rods, furlongs, miles, leagues, knots, hands, cubits, spans, and centimeters...?
Regards
Buck
Life has a way of making the foreseeable that which never happens, and the unforeseeable, that which your life becomes...
Buck
Life has a way of making the foreseeable that which never happens, and the unforeseeable, that which your life becomes...