1000 USD or so
There are 49000 and TWO and I have the TWO. Winchester had to remake the serial numbers 22xx and14xx that I had ordered. They issued them to some one else. So they made them to match my Wells Fargo's and added the letter A after the serial number. SO there 2 more than 49000
Winchester
The cast of 5 Rifles - 2001 includes: Ranjeet Paintal Hemant Birje Anu Kashyap Raza Murad Usha Raj
I have seen them go for $500 and even up to $1000 but it is just a matter of who you sell it to
The rifle he carried in Rio Bravo and El Dorado is in the Oklahoma cowboy Hall of Fame.
Winchester made the cowboy commemorative rifles in the year 1970.
They never made anything called a Pioneer...
Walther gets my vote. --------------------- New Answer--------------------------------------------------------- The finest .177 calibre air rifles are Olympic Competition .177 air rifles. These will fall to the Feinwerkbau line of Olympic rifles. However these are not cheap. The average cost is around $2500. Next in line are rifles made by AirForce airguns. Benjamin PCP airguns, Webley & Scott PCP air guns, Daystate LTD airguns and a few other PCP (PreCharged Pneumatin) air gun companies. Crosman, Gamo and Avante make fine air guns and rifles but are not as accurate as the ones previously mentioned.
If you mean the .50 BMG (there ARE other .50 caliber cartridges) it is a restricted firearm, requires licensing. There was a move to ban further imports of .50 cal BMG AMMO and rifles, but do not know where that stands.
Depends on your personal preferences. These are pretty much custom specialized rifles, and will not be likely to be used for an afternoon of casual plinking. Some people like chocolate, some like strawberry, some like multi-thousand dollar rifles.
4/100's of an inch. .50 cal = .5 inch .54 cal = .54 inch
they had bayenette's and long rifles and a couple thousand horse's
Many companies have made commerative 22 rifles. You will have to provide the name of the company, the event commerated and the condition of the rifle.
The MLE entered production in 1895, and ceased production in 1907, when the SMLE was introduced. Most countries manufacturing SMLE rifles ceased after 1945, as they had a glut of surplus rifles following the war, but some countries continued making them. The last country to mass produce the .303 calibre rifles was India, with their production ceasing ~1960.
If you're in the US, there isn't going to be any requirement to register a rifle. The only times rifles have to be registered is when they're Title II NFA regulated items (rifles with a barrel under 16", full auto rifles, etc.). The one exception to this rule is California, which requires registration of all so-called "civilian assault rifles" and .50 calibre rifles - neither of which can be gifted or transferred any other way to anyone within the state of California.
I have a Ranson in ,45 calibre, the nipple on my rifle is M6x.75. Some Italian rifles have M6x100 threads.
New in box $650.