To find the year that any Winchester gun was made, you just need to know which model it is and what the serial number is (the model number and serial number are stamped on the gun itself). . Then go to this website and it will tell you when it was made: http://oldguns.net/sn_php/winmods.htm
If you have a model 70 winchester rifle?then it was made in 1964 with the serial number you provided.
Rifle chambered in one of the cartridges named Winchester Magnum- such as the .300 Winchester Magnum- or .300 Win mag for short.
None. the term "300 Weatherby Magnum" is not merely a brand, it IS the caliber of the cartridge (no matter who makes it) It does NOT interchange with the .300 Winchester Magnum cartridge.
7mm Magnum and 300 Winchester Magnum
Depending on condition 300-1500 USD.
I know how much it would be worth to me. $1500. wa_tarp@yahoo.com if you want to sell
The G makes the number come up as invalid. Without the G, it comes back with a manufacture date of 1971
There was no 300 Winchester Magnum cartridge in 1939. A 1939 Model 70 would be marked "300 Mag"...and it will be chambered for the 300 H&H Magnum cartridge. There was no other 30 Magnum cartridge in 1939 in the Model 70. The 300 Winchester magnum cartridge was introduced in 1963,...the last year the Pre'64 Model 70 was made. Your 1939 Model 70 may have had a later barrel swapped in to it. 300 Winchester and 300 Win Mag are the same cartridge.
Your Winchester model 94 which was made in 1969 will bring between 175-300 dollars depending on overall condition,and a good bore.
150-300 dollars depending on overall condition and a good bore.
$200-$300. depending on condition.
300 mag is much bigger bullet
No. The WSM stands for Winchester Short Magnum. They are not interchangeable.
The 300 Win Mag wasn't introduced until 1963. It could have had a new barrel put on it. Take it to a gunsmith.
That rifle was manufactured in 1964. See this website for further info http://armscollectors.com/sn/windates.htm
The cartridge in question is the .300 Winchester Magnum, and not the .308 WinMag. The .308 cartridge is about 16mm shorter than the .300 Winchester Magnum casing. The two are NOTinterchangeable.
Depends on who made the 300 Winchester Magnum.
The age is between 1957 and 1959, and the value depends on condition of course, but in really good condition probably between $2,000 and $3,5000.The serial number supplied indicates that this Winchester model 70 bolt action rifle was made in the year 1956.Winchester began with serial number 361026,and finished at serial number 393595 in 1956.
The . 300 Winchester Magnum is a larger cartridge. They both use the same diameter bullet.
Your gun was made in 1974, so it is not a pre-64 model. Its value in good condition would be in the $300 range.
You have to provide. It will be on the receiver or barrel.
WSM, stands for Winchester Short Magnum.
Without a serial number there is no way we can tell you. Get the serial number, contact Customer Service at Winchester.
If your barrel is marked .300 Savage then you can shoot .300 Savage ammunition by any manufacturer. I do not know of a "300 Savage Winchester Magnum".
The 300 Winchester Magnum was not introduced until 1963. So yes most likely it is the H&H. I would do a chamber cast to make sure though. Both the .300 Win Magnum and the .300 H&H Magnum were standard calibers for the Model 70 in that era, with the .300 Win Magnum the more rare of the two. If your rifle is only stamped ".300 Magnum" it is more likely the .300 Win Magnum. You will want to have the chamber cast and the caliber verified before attempting to fire the rifle. I am lucky enough to own a pre 64 model 70 win,in the 300h&h.It is stamped 300 H&h Maginum.If your gun is stamped 300 Magnum , it is probally a 300 win mag.