Winchester 9416 Trappers before 1981 are Pre-USRAC and also before the design change. They sell for around $800. in good used condition, The 16" Trapper is highly desirable regardless of year of mfg.
Your winchester model 1894 trapper is valued between 150-350 dollars for a rifle with between 60%-90% original finish remaining and a good bore.
read top of barrel. it will tell you the caliber bullet it shoots............
I don't know but I have one too so if anyone knows please post a value!!
The .270 Winchester is a long action cartridge. It is a .30-06 Springfield necked down to hold a .277 caliber bullet.
Not quite a question yet. If you are asking about the physics, when a rifle fires a bullet, the ACTION of the bullet being pushed out of the barrel is equaled by the REACTION- or recoil, of the rifle pushing to the rear.
Gun can refer to a long gun or a hand gun. A rifle is very particular. It has to have grooved barrel which spin the bullet when it is going down the barrel. This spin action on the bullet makes it more accurate.
bullet
The barrel guides and accelerates the bullet out of the rifle, and imparts spin to the bullet to stabilize the bullet in flight.
If it's a 270 load, yes.
The action is the bullet being pushed out of the barrel. The equal and opposite reaction is the gun being pushed back.
Yes, a bullet must be the same diameter as the barrel (unless it is a shotgun).
Depends on the speed of the bullet, and the length of the barrel. In the case of a .22 rifle, firing a bullet at 1200 feet per second, from a 16 inch barrel, it will take 1/75th of a second for the bullet to leave the barrel.