David LaPell
Member
- Joined
- Mar 9, 2008
- Messages
- 5,541
- Reaction score
- 6,781
I've owned probably a dozen model 94's and a couple of 1894's and I can tell you I have had good and bad. I bought my first one when I was 18 in 1994 brand new. That gun could not hit a 2 liter bottle at 50 yards. My uncle got an identical 94 .30-30 right next to mine on the shelf and it has always been a very accurate rifle. I have had three or four 1970's guns, all of those were wickedly accurate. I had a pre-64 gun from 1949 and no matter what I did, I could not get that gun to shoot, period. I have an 1894 full length rifle in .38-55 made in 1895, one of the most accurate guns I ever owned. I had a 1894 SRC in .25-35 made in 1909 that came from a Utah sheep ranch, a real working gun that was so worn out that the buttstoke was made from Ponderosa pine, the sight was gone and there was an actual crack in the receiver. I saw it before another guy had it all repaired, I wished he would have kept that buttstock, it was something. It was another very accurate gun. Two I wished I had kept if it wasn't for bills and expenses at that time. It's been a spell since I had a Model 94, just the other day I spotted an 1894 in .38-55. It was once a full length rifle with a half mag that sometime in the past had the barrel shortened to 20 inches and a carbine sight added. Quality work done back before they were worth big money. I have a hard time right now not putting a couple of guns up for sale and buying that old timer for the sake of flattening a whitetail with it. I always did love that caliber. My grandfather carried the same Model 1894 from the late 1920's until 1994 when he quit hunting. I often wonder how many whitetails that gun accounted for over the years. It's one of the reasons I fell in love with the design. It works, period.
