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Paul K. Dickman Paul K. Dickman is offline
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Default Sorta on topic - Cowboy assault rifle?


"Richard" wrote in message
m...
On 2/20/2013 2:02 PM, Bob La Londe wrote:
There was a documentary on Winchester that mentioned that 94s before a
certain year are more desirable.



1964 was the first big change.
Some of the internals that were forged before were changed to stamped
sheet metal (so we are on topic). Some solid pins were changed to roll
pins. All in order to reduce manufacturing costs.

All this went over like a lead balloon. Customers were offended - even
though it really made no difference in operation or accuracy.


The next big change was in the early '90s when Winchester redesigned the
action to allow the brass to be ejected to the side rather than straight
up. This was to allow the installation of a scope.


One correction, Angle eject was done in the early '80s.
The crossbolt safety was in the '90s.

Paul K. Dickman


At the same time, a cross-bolt safety was added - which again upset a
lot of customers. While it adds a safety feature, the hammer still
releases when the trigger is pulled, but the gun doesn't fire.
Wasted shots were the big complaint. BTW, this is often referred to as
the "Lawyer's Safety".

In 2003 they moved the safety to a tang on the aft end of the receiver.
(Dunno if that locked the trigger, or just blocked the hammer)

Production at Winchester ended in 2006 and moved to Japan.