Back during the January Madness I bought a used but unfired Winchester Legacy Model 94 in .45 Colt instead of buying an AR like most of the rest of the country (well, it seemed like it).
The photo, cropped from an old advertisement, isn't the one I bought but closely resembles it. Is this a rifle by virtue of its 24" barrel, or a carbine because of the barrel band? You got me.
I really like how this one handles--better, in my opinion, than my 1957-manufactured Model 94 .30-30, and it's actually smoother. It does have the short-lived push button safety in the receiver, but I surprised myself by learning to like it. For one thing, with the safety applied, you can use the lever to eject all the cartridges in the magazine with no danger of dropping the hammer on the firing pin, and in theory you could carry this rifle cocked and locked--although there wouldn't be much point in doing that.
My bitching a bit about that safety, BTW, caused the LGS guy to knock $50 off the price after I'd already agreed to the original asking price. This guy is mainly focused on "tactical" stuff--Glocks and ARs and such--and, I suspect, views my interest in lever guns and revolvers with amusement or sees it as evidence of premature senility.
Ammo is expensive, when I can find it, but what the heck. I intend to order some souped-up Buffalo Bore ammo, so I can use this gun in those fantasy bear hunts so many folks indulge in.
