box of 25 long western sold for47.50 so i think if it works 300 is fair price
2 types of 25 caliber Stevens. 1. In centerfire, you have 25-20 Stevens and I believe 25-50 Stevens of which brass is available from Midway. 2. In rimfire you have the 25. rimfire round which apparently is unavailable as I am currently searching for a source.
I can find no listing for a J. Stevens model 80. There was, though, a model #83 bolt action made in various rimefire calibers including the .25 rimfire. This firearm was discontinued in about 1942. I find it difficult to believe that many .25 caliber models were made that late though. Unless you were to find an avid Stevens collector I doubt if you could get more than $300 for it as ammo is just about imposible to find.
These older stevens guns are valued at between 65-150 dollars.
Yes. The model 27 was made in .25 Stevens rimfire, and .25-20, plus .32-20.
Ammo in .25 rimfire has not been available for many decades.so the answer is no.
Stevens 25 Rimfire ammunition has been obsolete for many years and is now an expensive collectors item and when available it is in very limited quantities. Shootable quantities have not been available since before 1960.
If we are talking about the model 15 favorite,which was a chambered in .22lr,.22WRF,or 25 or 32 rimfire?These rifles were made from 1915-1940.
The Arms and Tool part of the name was used from 1886 to 1915. Guns chambered for .25 rimfire would PROBABLY have been in the first half of that period. To get an estimate of it's value you will have to identify the model. Most collectors like to think they COULD shoot their guns if they wanted to, and many can't resist the temptation to make it go BANG one more time, so being chambered for obsolete .25 rimfire ammuntion will reduce it's value.
Rimfire - film - was created on 1949-03-25.
25-125 USD
25-130 USD or so
100-400 USD