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99C: "C" presumably means "clip", because the 99C was the only variant to have a detachable box magazine rather than the iconic internal rotary magazine. The Model 99C was primarily based on the 99F and was produced from 1965 to 1997. 99CD: Deluxe version of the Model 99C. The Model 99CD had a Monte Carlo cheekpiece stock.
The .250-3000 Savage / 6.5x48mm (also known as the .250 Savage) is a rifle cartridge created by Charles Newton in 1915. It was designed to be used in the Savage Model 99 hammerless lever action rifle .
As it wasn't implemented in the Savage 99 until the 1960s, the discussion of the origin of the detachable magazine should probably be discussed in the Magazine (firearms) article, rather than here. I am removing the reference. Someone will need to find a reference showing the exact date of the Model 99c was introduced and write a new section on ...
Savage Arms is an American gunmaker based in Westfield, Massachusetts, with operations in Canada and China. Savage makes a variety of rimfire and centerfire rifles, as well as Stevens single-shot rifles and shotguns. The company is best known for the Model 99 lever-action rifle, no longer in production, and the .300 Savage.
Arthur William Savage (May 19, 1857 – September 22, 1938), was a British businessman, inventor, and explorer. He is most famous for inventing the Savage Model 99 lever-action rifle, which remained in production for over 100 years, and founding Savage Arms.
The .300 Savage cartridge is a rimless, .30 caliber rifle cartridge developed by Savage Arms in 1920. It was designed to replace the less powerful .303 Savage in their popular Savage Model 1899 hammerless lever-action rifle, [ 5 ] which they started to produce again as Model 99, as well as the new Savage Model 1920 bolt-action rifle.
The first version had a plastic magazine. It was followed by the 64B. [1] The Model 64 Savage has a free floating barrel, standard. In 2019, Savage designed a variant of the Model 64 designed for easy disassembly and reassembly. This variant is called the Model 64 Takedown. The Model 64 Takedown is only available in matte-black with synthetic ...
CLOAD was a cassette and disk magazine for the TRS-80 which started in 1978. [4] The magazine ran monthly and provided tapes by subscription. [5] The magazine was named after the command to load a tape into the TRS-80. [5] Compute!'s Gazette, originally announced as The Commodore Gazette, was a spinoff of Compute! for the Commodore 64. [6]