The story of the Remington Nylon 66...

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Here's another draft article for review and comments. This one is near and dear to my heart, as I collect these rifles. There is so much more to this story - so much that it could be contained in a book - when I find the time and a publisher. In the meanwhile, here are the highlights regarding this fantastic rifle and its spinoffs.

Hope you enjoy it!

John

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The Remington Nylon 66 .22 semiautomatic rifle was revolutionary when it was introduced. The stock and most of the rifle itself was made of plastic. It needed no lubrication. It was accurate and boringly reliable right out of the box. It was virtually impervious to the elements. Critics said it would never sell well. It sold phenomenally. Now that it has been long gone from production, used examples sell for escalating prices unheard of just a few years ago. Light, handy and nearly indestructible, the Nylon 66 filled a niche that no other rifle has since. It spawned a variety of limited-manufacture spinoff arms that are nearly unobtainable now and extremely expensive when found on the collector market. There’s never been anything like it.

Let’s rewind the calendar back to the late 1950s. Remington’s research and development department had conceptualized a .22 rifle made almost entirely of plastic, to be designed as a light, reliable and durable semiautomatic. Luckily, Remington had the resources of its parent corporation, DuPont, to come up with a plastic material that would meet stringent criteria. The synthetic material had to be moldable to any shape. It had to have high tensile, impact and flex strength. It should have high abrasion resistance and withstand extremes of cold and heat. It should not burn when an initiating flame would be removed. It should be fungus-resistant, and unattractive to rodents and insects. The finish should be easily repairable. And finally, it had to be self-lubricating and hold its dimensions indefinitely. DuPont’s solution was a blended Nylon formula christened “Zytel 101.”

Wayne E. Leek headed the Remington R&D department. Assisting him was a crack team that included Charles H. Morse, Homer W. Young, Robert P. Kelly, and James S. Martin. This team machined a prototype framework out of a solid bar of the new material for test purposes. They were thrilled with the results. The new gun was fired 75,000 times and exceeded all their expectations for suitability and durability.

Now it was 1958. Wayne Leek actually had two big challenges. One was designing the rifle, using a large number of metal stampings that could be made inexpensively and yet interact together reliably and consistently. The second challenge was even larger. The Remington management was unconvinced that the radical new rifle would sell. Leek had to become a crusader, selling the concept to the Remington brass. He lobbied hard, and finally got his way. The result was outstanding. The new rifle, finally called the “Nylon 66”, was named after the specific color mixture which produced a wood-like appearance. Production started in November of 1958, and in 1959, the new rifle took the market by storm. It was to become one of the largest selling .22 rifles of all time.

The new semiauto had no conventional stock and action. Instead these were molded together in two halves which were joined together laterally. This formed one sturdy and warp-free unit. The action parts were placed within this framework. The barrel was inserted from the front and held by a yoke in the proper position. A sheet metal action cover gave the visual illusion of a separate receiver, and was grooved for “tip-off” scope mounting. A tube in the buttstock held fourteen .22 long rifle cartridges that were fed forward into the action by a spring. The reciprocating blowback bolt rode on nylon raceways, and needed no lubrication. This was a big advantage, as oil would tend to attract unburned powder granules and other firing residue. A light coating of oil on the metal parts for protection was all that was needed. The stock looked like finely finished wood. It was first introduced in “Mohawk brown,” followed in early 1959 by “Seneca green,” which was actually a green-tinted brown. This version was only made from 1959 to 1961, with just short of 45,000 bearing this unique color. It’s a collectors’ item today.

The rifle had a “space age” look with its sleek lines and racy front sight. It weighed about four pounds and was easy to carry and handle. Its tubular magazine was well-protected within the stock. It proved to be utterly reliable and amazingly accurate. The first models featured a fully-adjustable notched rear sight, with both elevation and windage knobs that contained screw slots. The windage knob was exchanged in 1964 for just a screw slot in the end of the windage screw. The rifle illustrated is an early one made in September, 1959, and is complete with the windage knob. All Nylon 66s, by the way, have date codes stamped on the barrel which are easily found and deciphered on the internet, yielding the month and year of manufacture.

To induce the public to break with the tradition of wood and steel, Remington went all out with an advertising campaign. As part of this, Remington field representative Tom Frye, an accomplished exhibition shooter, used two weeks of his vacation in October, 1959 to set a new world record at the Holiday hotel in Reno, Nevada. Fifty-three years earlier, the legendary Ad Topperwein had shot at 72,500 2.5-inch square wooden blocks which were thrown in the air, using Winchester Model 1903 .22 semiautos over a period of 12 days. He shot all the blocks except nine. Frye was up to the challenge. Alternately using two to four Nylon 66 rifles, Frye shot at and hit all but six of 100,010 similar wooden blocks. The rifles and the Remington-Peters rimfire cartridges performed without a hitch of any kind.

In 1962, the “Apache black” variation of the 66 was introduced. This had a black stock with white inlays, and a chromed receiver cover and barrel. It sold well. 220, 564 units were made until it was discontinued in 1983. Also in 1962, the “Gallery Special” came on stream, modified internally to fire .22 shorts only. It’s easily identified by the sheet metal shell deflector plate on the side ahead of the operating handle. It was part of the line until 1981, and with only 16,474 made, it’s now a valued variation among collectors.

Flushed with the success of the Nylon 66, Remington came out with quite a number of spinoff rifles featuring the use of Nylon stocks. These came on the market in 1962, but never enjoyed the popularity of the “parent” Nylon 66s. There were bolt action single shots, bolt action tubular feeds, and bolt action “clip fed” types. There was even a single shot smoothbore for shooting .22 LR shot shells. Nylon-stocked lever actions (Trail Riders) in Mohawk brown and Apache Black were also made, as well as some limited all-black lever rifles with matte receiver covers that were uncataloged. All of these are now in the collector category, and they were discontinued in 1964.

In 1970, a detachable-magazine variation of the Nylon 66 came out. Called the Nylon 77, its plastic magazine held five rounds. It was not popular, and was soon replaced by the Mohawk 10C – the only change was a 10-round plastic magazine. This was not a catalog item and was sold at cut-rate prices through distributors. In 1978, the “Black Diamond” Nylon 66 came on stream. It had a black stock, but unlike the “Apache Black” version, the receiver cover and barrel were the standard blue. Instead of a white diamond stock insert, it had a black one, hence the name. It was discontinued in 1989. Two commemorative Nylon 66s were made, one to celebrate the U.S. Bicentennial in 1976, and one to mark the Remington 150th anniversary in 1966. Both had stamped bronze-filled roll-marked “engravings” on the left of the receiver cover. The final variation of the Nylon series was the Apache 77, sold only through K-Mart. It had a green “clip fed” stock, and unlike all the previous versions, no white line spacers were used. It used the same plastic magazine as the Nylon 10C.

Finally, the molds used to produce the stocks had become worn, and Remington decided to discontinue the Nylon rifles. They are no more. The last 66s were probably shipped in early 1991. It's been estimated that over 1,050,000 were made. Some of the tooling was sold, and a few clones were produced in South America for a while. There’s much more detail involved in the Remington Nylon saga, but space considerations preclude it from being covered here. It’s a subject for a future book – maybe when I find the time and a publisher! At any rate, used Nylon rifles are now in high demand, and besides their collector interest, they still make fine rifles for shooting. If you have one or more, you know that!

(c) 2014 JLM
 
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First firearm I ever purchased was a Nylon 66 Apache. Had just gotten back from Viet-Nam. 1969 stationed at Fort Carson and there were a group of plinkers in my battalion. Bought the Remington at the post sporting goods store. If I recall correctly I paid around $70 for it and a four power Weaver scope. Still have it. It still shoots as good as new. Probably going to start the oldest granddaughter out on it this summer.
 
Fine article, John.

A brother-in-law of mine had a Mohawk Brown 66; and much as I loved my Marlin 39A, I sort of grudgingly lusted for the nylon wonder. It was a very sweet-shooting, accurate little rifle, and not much more than half the weight of the Marlin.
 
The handy nylon rifles were very popular and seemed to be in the back window of pickup trucks all over with a 4X scope. What kind of accuracy do they get? Very good story on another successful Remington product. Larry
 
Good article, thanks. I always wanted one but never got around to getting it. My loss.
 
Excellent story!

While I have never owned one, I remember pouring over my Dad's American Rifleman Magazines in the early 60's and drooling over that rifle.
One of my shootin' Bud's has one and I should ask him to bring it down to the Range next weekend as I have never shot one and would really like to.
 
First 22 rifle I ever bought was one of these, an early Mohawk brown one I got for $40 at a farm auction. It never failed to work and always shot well. Wish I still had it but foolishly traded it off for something else. Have owned a few more since then and still have one tucked in the safe that gets to come out now and then.
 
I think a lot of us older shooters that were young back in those days wanted that "Flash Gordon" rifle !!

Sure looked a lot better than an old single shot bolt action that my brother and I used.................
Got to shot a friends and it was really a sweet rifle....... no scope, just iron sights.

Thanks for the great post and history on the Remington rifle.
 
First Remington .22 rifle I ever shot was Dads 12C NRA pump. At the time @ 1956 and on I also shot a lot of Winchester Gallery guns at the local/County Fairs.

I remember the 66's coming out and dismissed them at the time as cheap and inferior to the wood and steel I was weaned on.

Never having owned one I have come to respect the place they grew. I still look for a bargain one just to play with.
I know I've passed many opportunities at long-ago gun shows, like everything else.

Perhaps one will "fall into my lap" one day, but I still have Dads 12C NRA.

Thanks for a great article! Very informative!
 
Thanks, Paladin! On my 13th birthday, my Dad gave me his Nylon 66. It was the first gun I ever owned. Some day, my son will own it.
 
First firearm I ever purchased was a Nylon 66 Apache.

I'm in the same boat. The first firearm I ever purchased was an Apache Black 66. I too still have it and it is a great rifle. I'll bet I've taken over a hundred squirrels with it over the years! Very accurate with those iron sights.
 
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I thought they were great looking when they came out; still do. But I already had a serviceable Marlin bolt action .22, and no way was I liable to have TWO .22 rifles. Plus then I would have to routinely feed it with high powered long rifle ammo which my budget would never have stood.

It took about 40 years for me to actually get one into the herd. Neat little guns.
 
I wanted a nylon 66 so bad when i was a kid.... my pop was old school... wood metal, bolt action (for a speedy shot) and no magazine.... I had to "suffer" with grampa's winchester model 67. I was so bummed that I could not have that yankee rifle that I could load once and shoot all week.
 
The prices on these are all over the place. What's a good price for a standard Mohawk in around 95% cond.? I know the other models are bringing more.
Another question: have you found that the nylon raceways deteriorate with time and crack? Nylon is know to get brittle and do that.
 
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I was in Cabelas in Rogers Mn a couple months ago. They had dozens of the Nylon Remington 22s. I joked with the guy and asked if they were trying to corner the market on nylon Remingtons. He said they bought a collection of over 300 of them from one guy. They had bolt actins, lever actions, and semi autos. Some were clip, some were tube feed. Most were brown but some were black and one was a dark green. Most were blued but some were nickel or chromed metal. It was an interesting collection. They seemed way over priced, at about $500- 1200.
There was still quite a few of them there last week.
 
Some years back a friend of mine brought me his father's Nylon 66. Seems that Dad had decided to take it apart and clean it. :eek:
Anyway, Dad couldn't get it back together, finally gave up and threw it in the back of the closet with a coffee can full of small parts. My friend didn't know exactly when this had happened just that in was in the back of that closet for many years. He asked me if I could fix it.
I recognized it right off, knew it was a good rifle and told him I'd give it a shot. Naturally over the years some of those tiny parts had gone missing. :rolleyes:
I spread it out on my bench and even with an exploded view parts diagram it still took a couple of hours just to figure out what was missing. I found an on-line source for the parts and got them ordered.
What followed were several frustrating afternoons with me, this pile of parts and J.B. Woods book. But I finally got it back together.
I took it to the range to test fire it and the little rifle actually drew a crowd. Comments ranged from 'What's that?" to "Oh Wow! Can I shoot it?" Between me and several helpers, we burned through a whole brick of .22s in short order.
That odd looking little gun shot like a champ and never missed a beat. We had a lot of fun with it. :D
I gave it back to my friend and he was tickled to death to have Dad's old rifle back in working order.
Maybe someday, if I stumble across one at a good price, I'll buy it for myself. But I'll never take it apart! ;)
 
I bought a Nylon 66 new in the early 70's. Still have the gun and shoot it all the time. I took it apart for the first time this year after finding a how-to on youtube. That thing was quite dirty after all the shots that went through it. Got it all back together and adding to the round count. :)

I will never get rid of this Nylon 66 until I can't shoot it anymore, then give it to one of my grandsons.

I want a Nylon 76. :D
 
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