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Model 94 in a .32 Win Special. Serial number 2357667. Manufacture date 1958. Good to Excellent condition.

2007-02-25 09:32:04 · 4 answers · asked by bhhack 1 in Sports Outdoor Recreation Hunting

4 answers

Last Friday I spoke to a friend in Laredo who keeps up with these things. He tells me that even the plain-Jane .30-30 Winchester 1894 is re-selling for $400. due to the fact that Winchester closed its doors. The .32 Winchester Special (a necked up .30-30) is rarer than the .30-30, which is probably the most common chambering for the modern 1894. Even with the high serial number your .32 Win. Special 1894 should bring approx. six to eight hundred. It is really hard to say without seeing the rifle itself, but say 5 to six-hundred in good and 7 to eight-hundred in excellent condition.

I would keep it, especially since there will probably not be any more manufactured anytime soon. For this very reason I just put some money on a Winchester Trapper 16" barrel no safety .44 Mag. like new, never fired. Good luck.

H

2007-02-25 11:24:17 · answer #1 · answered by H 7 · 2 0

Winchester model 1894...AKA...model 94 is one of the most common rifles made. In fact it was the first rifle that hit the 1,000,000 copy mark. In 1927 the millionth rifle was given to President Coolidge. Before production ended in 2006, over SEVEN MILLION were made. The fact that the Winchester 94 is such a common gun does a lot to drive the price of a used gun down.

However, your gun was made "pre-64" which adds a lot to the value. In 1964 Winchester made a number of cost cutting measures which many feel screwed up the rifles.

Without seeing the gun, I would say it is worth Between $400 and $550, depending upon the specific model, how well the stock fits the frame, and condition of the bore. I would not try to redo the stock or bluing. Take it to a gun show and find a guy who has a Winchester table and get an estimate from him.

2007-02-25 12:08:32 · answer #2 · answered by forgivebutdonotforget911 6 · 0 0

That's a less desirable caliber, but with prices going nuts these days, you could probably get $350 or $400 for it assuming the barrel's in great shape. 32's with that slow twist rate become wall-hangers much more easily than the better calibers, but there's a lot of collector interest that has nothing to do with shootability.

2007-02-25 11:51:08 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

So it extremely is a saddle ring carbine, yet what's the chambering? has it been refinished and if no longer how a number of the unique end is left on the steel and the wood? optimistically with that records somebody might supply you a decently precise cost interior the condition you describe taking photos it won't impression it extremely is cost in any respect as long because it gets wiped sparkling exact

2016-11-25 22:59:00 · answer #4 · answered by klingbeill 4 · 0 0

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