Are trees covered under AOLQ?![]()
If you knew the tree you would understand. He is a mean mother... lol
Are trees covered under AOLQ?![]()
If you knew the tree you would understand. He is a mean mother... lol
There are some sweet vintage sights made for these old model lever actions and single shot rifles, by Lyman and Marbles, like this tang peep sight on a Marlin 1894. They will get about as much out of these rifles as a scope will.
View attachment 53543
Yes, they look good, and they work.
With the large aperture, it is about 3-4 inches from your eye, and works as a ghost ring sight.
You can change to a large disk with a small aperture for a really sharp front sight and target image.
On something like a .30-30, set the open sight for 100 yards and then swing up the tang sight for 150.
Southern, do you have any experience of the combine picantinny rail - ghost ring sight options you see from people like XS?
Mike
I've used Williams version of this, "Ace-in-the-hole", on my Marlin (from Roger at SYSS). Works ok as a close-range/backup sight but due to the size of the bell of my scope, I can't leave the peep set at its zero position. Not all scopes will have this problem.
It's a less precise option than a smaller aperture, dedicated sight but good for a quick acquisition option.
I have a Williams receiver sight for a Marlin 336 with 3 apertures (2 the ghost ring type) and 2 end bead sights If you look back on my threads you will see what I paid for them but as I never got along with them someone can have them for £20 plus the postage (I'm in the US so can post them in the US or get a friend to take them back to the UK and post them there)
Regards,
Gixer
I walked into a pawn shop in 1994 and there was a lever gun that said "Brazilian .357, $60"
It was a Rossi/Taurus Model 92 Winchester clone with exceptionally nice, dark wood. I took it home and ran about 50 different cast bullet loads through it. Instant love affair.
It is a tack driver and still loitering around my gunroom someplace.~Muir
Don't you love pawn shops for that? Ha!
The Rossi 92 is a slick little rifle. I know several boys, now men, who started their deer hunting with one, limited to 50 yards shots by their father or grandfather.
You remind me of going into a disheveled pawn shop to ask directions and spying a clean Steyr Mannlicher 1952 in the rack.
"Could I see that old rifle with the wood stock?"
"This here Stoeger?"
"Yeah, that. Hmmm... whatcha want for it?"
"$600 cash."
"$500."
"Sale".
And it had factory QD mounts and a Leupold scope. Shoots everything into tiny groups. I pinch myself every time I shoot it.
Pawn shops are a great place to find lever action guns in the USA.
Two friends of mine are Marlin collectors. They went hunting somewhere in Quebec, and went into a hardware / gun store, where the younger hunters were all trading stuff for the new plastic stocked bolt actions. They said there were Marlins and Winchester lever actions all over the place. They bought about five and brought had them shipped back home. These all vintage rifles in .38-55, .38-40, etc. They said they were going back, but don't know if they did. They both got a moose and bear, and all this, so it was a trip to remember.
This is because there are not that common/popular, so if my RFD got a couple of rifles for me to handle they would have a hard time shifting the one I did not like. So I guess, as I want to buy from them, I will need to travel a bit and get a feel for a few guns before I place an order.