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Marlin Model 20, 20s, 27, 27s, 29, 37, and 47 Pump-action rifles chambered in .22 Short, .22 Long, .22LR. All with tubular magazines. Early models had octagon barrels. The model 37 was manufactured between 1927-1930 only and is very rare today. Marlin Model 1881, lever action repeater, the first commercially successful lever action that could ...
Model or series Class of firearm Origin Low estimate of production High estimate of production [b]. Notes Kalashnikov AK-47 (and derivatives) Assault rifle Soviet Union ...
The .40-65 Winchester (also called the .40-65 Winchester and Marlin) [1] was an American rifle cartridge. Introduced in 1887 for the Winchester Model 1886 , and available in Winchester single shots and in the Marlin Model 1895 , it was "a further effort to put more steam" in repeating rifle cartridges. [ 2 ]
View history; General What links here; Related changes; Upload file; ... Marlin Model XT-22 This page was last edited on 7 October 2010, at 21:43 (UTC). ...
The Marlin Levermatic was a family of lever-action rifles created by Marlin Firearms in the 1955. The Levermatic differed from the traditional lever-action rifles, such as the Marlin 39A , in that it employed a cam-and-roller system giving it an extremely smooth and short lever motion to reload a new cartridge.
John Mahlon Marlin (May 6, 1836 – July 1, 1901) was an American firearms manufacturer and inventor. Marlin was born in Boston Neck, near Windsor Locks, Hartford County, Connecticut, as the son of Mahlon Marlin and Jennette Bradford. He worked at the Colt plant in Hartford during the American Civil War.
In recent years, edit-a-thon subjects have included women in science, diversity in comics, and African-American history in North Carolina. Jack is a typical North Carolina Wikipedian.
The Golden Model 39A started life as the Marlin Model 1891, the first lever-action rifle ever chambered in .22LR and the magazine was loaded through a conventional side gate in the receiver. The tubular magazine was changed to front-loading with the Model 1892 , due to the difficulties of receiver feeding the small rimfire round . [ 2 ]