You mean to use the safety as a slide lock? This happened to me. It turns out I was missing the trigger return spring. The trigger has to be in the forward position for the safety lever to be able to move. Try pulling the trigger forward the next time you try this. Another thing I noticed about my gun, when I realease the slide by lowering the safety lever the hammer falls about 20% of the time! Seems to be fine otherwise.
Assuming you're talking about who the company transitioned into, and that would be Savage Stevens firearms. http://www.savagearms.com/
Yes, if is wasn't it would mess with the lab.
savage lands
usually a safety is a smaller quicker guy that can hit hard. He is smaller than both linebackers and the defensive line. For ex: if the average d line player is 270, linebacker is 210, and the corners and safety would be about 190
You could use the Jaws theme tune.
The model 1921 was made by Savage / Stevens from 1921 to 1932. A total of 13,000 were made during that period.
http://www.gunreports.com/special_reports/long_guns/Savage-Slide-Action-Rifles-gunsmithing-model-1702516-1.html
I would contact Savage Arms (they own Springfield) and ask. Customer service at their website would be a good start.
Can't be done without knowing who made it.
I would contact Savage arms on there web site for info on your savage model 487T.
the correct term would be SAV. but yeah he's a hella savage
No, "slide" is the present tense. The future tense would be "will slide".
The weels would slide The weels would slide The weels would slide
As a matter of safety I would not have them close enough to one another for either to have any effect on the other.
The savage model 24V was made from 1967-1989.for a specific year you would have to contact Savage customer service directly.
youd go faster, but the slide would get sticky after a while and would give someone a wedgie or pull their pants down!
This would be a Savage model 38A or 58A or Savage-Springfield 18.41.