1965
i have stevens model 34m and know not a thing about it.Your Savage/Stevens made model 34M was made from 1969-1973.it was chambered in .22 Win Mag.(.22WMR).The Savage/Stevens model 46 is simular to the model 34M but has a Tubular magazine which was made during the same time frame(1969-1973).
Your Savage model 46 was made by Savage Arms from 1969-1973.
46 years
The Savage Arms Revelation model 115 is worth $150 in good condition. Revelation was a Western Auto name. The Western Auto is really a Savage 46.
Your rifle was made by Savage for Western Auto. It is a Savage Model 46. You can contact Savage for an owners manual. It is a very basic bolt action. Remove the screw on the underside of the forearm to take action out of stock. Push the 2 pins out that hold the trigger group in place, and you can remove the bolt. gunpartscorp was a schematic at their website, under savage 46.
Brian Savage is 46 years old (birthdate: February 24, 1971).
Roz Savage is 46 years old. She was born on 23 December 1967.
sky savage the owner of the sky tower live in glenfield 46 totara vail
If your revelation is a bolt action, tube fed .22, it is probably a Savage Model 46. Savage is a good quality moderate cost firearm- and any firearm with a "store brand", such as Revelation, JC Higgins, or Westernfield typically commands less money than the company marked firearms. Depending on condition, $50-$80.
Had the same gun...got it from my Grandfather and recently handed it on it to my Son - I found the following internet posting while I was doing research on it: "I have a J.C.Higgins .22 that is clearly marked 101.13 on the barrel and, according to the book, was made by Stevens and was their model 85-7. I bought it new in '46-'47." I'm not sure what "book" the poster is referring to, but the Sears and Roebuck cross-reference tables list the JC Higgins 101.13 as a Stevens Model 86, and the Blue Book "House Brand" conversion tables list the 101.13 as a "Model 86-7". This corresponds to the time frame when my Grandfather would have been in his "gun-buying" years, so my best guess is the rifle was manufactured between 1946 and 1950; (I would actually guess '47/'48). I've been told that since the guns were not serialized, dating can only be "model specific" without provenance. I will point out that I do not know how long Model 101-13 (86-7)was in production for Sears. Sears discontinued the "JC Higgins" line in '61/'62. To my knowledge Savage Arms (who bought Stevens) does not make public (if they have them at all) Stevens legacy production records - Hope this helps! Had the same gun...got it from my Grandfather and recently handed it on it to my Son - I found the following internet posting while I was doing research on it: "I have a J.C. Higgins .22 that is clearly marked 101.13 on the barrel and, according to the book, was made by Stevens and was their model 85-7. I bought it new in '46-'47." I'm not sure what "book" the poster is referring to, but the Sears and Roebuck cross-reference tables list the JC Higgins 101.13 as a Stevens Model 86, and the Blue Book "House Brand" conversion tables list the 101.13 as a "Model 86-7". This corresponds to the time frame when my Grandfather would have been in his "gun-buying" years, so my best guess is the rifle was manufactured between 1946 and 1950; (I would actually guess '47/'48). I've been told that since the guns were not serialized, dating can only be "model specific" without provenance. I will point out that I do not know how long Model 101-13 (86-7)was in production for Sears. Sears discontinued the "JC Higgins" line in '61/'62. To my knowledge Savage Arms (who bought Stevens) does not make public (if they have them at all) Stevens legacy production records - Hope this helps!
46 haploid
Amana