Ranchero50
Ultimate Member
Just a series of pics of my '39 vintage Winchester Model 62 and '28 vintage Remington Model 12-C.
All of the pictures are clickable for full sized images. Of course they are out of order and show from newest to oldest but...
A lot of rubbing with steel wool and oil worked the rusty film away and brought the color back out.
Lyman sights front and rear really help make the Remi a tack driver.
The Remi was missing the back half of the firing pin but Numrich was able to help make the magic happen. It also needed a lot of rust remediation and removal as seen by the barrel.
Shooting them both the Winchester cycles flawlessly. The Remington struggles a little because it handshakes the rim up through a slot to the bolt. One neat thing is when you cycle the Remington the feed tube moves back with the handle. Both are accurate out to 40 yards versus a 8" steel disc shooting offhand and are quiet enough with the 23" and 24" barrels to not need ears. Both of these old gentlemen are a blast to shoot and enjoy. The Remington a little more with the iron sights though. Just put the front pipper on the target and center the ghost rear ring around it and the steel jumps.
All of the pictures are clickable for full sized images. Of course they are out of order and show from newest to oldest but...
A lot of rubbing with steel wool and oil worked the rusty film away and brought the color back out.
Lyman sights front and rear really help make the Remi a tack driver.
The Remi was missing the back half of the firing pin but Numrich was able to help make the magic happen. It also needed a lot of rust remediation and removal as seen by the barrel.
Shooting them both the Winchester cycles flawlessly. The Remington struggles a little because it handshakes the rim up through a slot to the bolt. One neat thing is when you cycle the Remington the feed tube moves back with the handle. Both are accurate out to 40 yards versus a 8" steel disc shooting offhand and are quiet enough with the 23" and 24" barrels to not need ears. Both of these old gentlemen are a blast to shoot and enjoy. The Remington a little more with the iron sights though. Just put the front pipper on the target and center the ghost rear ring around it and the steel jumps.