Your question cannot be answered as written.You would have to supply the type of firearm you are asking about(rifle,handgun,shotgun etc.) and the make of the firearm in question.The caliber is also important.Please repost our question along with the serial number,and we may be able to assist you.
Your gun sn: B70526 has too many numbers in the serial number, to be a gun that starts with "B" in the serial sequence. Please re-check and ask again.
Check the serial number, it seems to have too many digits to be a Winchester serial number for a model 94.If the number is correct, the gun must be of recent manufacture, (making it post 64)
Too vague a question. List the guage, serial number and the condition
This serial number is too early a number to be a Browning Arms Co gun. FN in Belgium produced the A5 for other markets and this serial would have been one of those. It sounds like you have a gun that should have a letter above or preceding 20179. Please recheck and reask the question. Also state the guage.
Too many numbers in 7465457 to be a Browning Serial number. Need the correct serial number to determine age. Model would help as well. Value is too difficult to be accurate without seeing the gun. Condition which includes the amount of original finish and original configuration will determine value. Recommend taking it to a gun shop for appraisal.
There probably isn't one. Lower priced guns didn't carry a serial number because the equipment to sequentially number them would add too much to the cost. The Fed finally forced the gun makers to number all firearms in the 50's
There probably isn't one. Lower priced guns didn't carry a serial number because the equipment to sequentially number them would add too much to the cost. The Fed finally forced the gun makers to number all firearms in the 50's
It probably did not leave the factory with that finish. I would guess that the serial number is unreadable because the gun was polished too aggressively by whoever added the nickel plating. Without the serial number, a Winchester expert may be able to approximate the manufacture date by examining the gun, but the exact year cannot be determined.
This is the only place I found for the 1911A1 model.That's seems to be a very high number for that model. http://www.sightm1911.com/1911Production.htm It would appear you listed too many numbers in the serial number. If you removed the first number '9', then it would be a Colt made in 1944
it would appear there are too many numbers in your serial number.....................
You have a Knick model, named after the designer, Frank Knickerbocker. This design was introduced in 1922 and ran until 1988 when it was discontinued. The previous design, The Flues model, ended at serial number 399,000 in 1922, so your serial number places the manufacture date not too long after the gun was introduced.
Value is too difficult to be accurate without seeing the gun. Condition which includes the amount of original finish and original configuration will determine value. Recommend taking it to a gun shop for appraisal.