Re: A few questions about the Winchester 94
Posted: 25 Dec 2017 01:22
Ok, so maybe I should expand on my previous response.
I own a Rossi 92 .44 Magnum 24" SS Octagonal and a Rossi 92 .44 Magnum 20" SS Round Barrel.
The 24" soaks up recoil better, the 20" is a joy to carry and points faster and kicks harder.
I don't recall for certain but I think the catalogued weight at the time I acquired them was about 2 lbs difference. Maybe plus or minus a half pound.
I also own a 44 Mag 24" round barreled Winchester 94 Legacy that more or less splits the difference between the Rossi .44 mags. It doesn't point quite as fast as the 20" RB, carries almost as easy and IMO due to a better shaped butt plate probably handles recoil better than either.
Octagonal barrels initially were done more because it was easier and faster to machine them that way, possibly even with a hand file than to get a nice round profile. Eventually as machining caught up and it became easier to machine a consistent round barrel without variations in wall thickness or cosmetic flaws the octagonal became purely cosmetic.
The half round barrel gives you some of the weight and cosmetics of the octagonal while removing the weight from the last half of the barrel. Since the weight is removed from the muzzle end it handles faster than the octagonal. It gives you a different look and was often a custom shop or special order option back in the days of the original Winchester 92s & 86s or early 94s. I only own one of these and since it's a .22 single shot Winchester it is over built to heck and gone but it's still fun.
I own a Rossi 92 .44 Magnum 24" SS Octagonal and a Rossi 92 .44 Magnum 20" SS Round Barrel.
The 24" soaks up recoil better, the 20" is a joy to carry and points faster and kicks harder.
I don't recall for certain but I think the catalogued weight at the time I acquired them was about 2 lbs difference. Maybe plus or minus a half pound.
I also own a 44 Mag 24" round barreled Winchester 94 Legacy that more or less splits the difference between the Rossi .44 mags. It doesn't point quite as fast as the 20" RB, carries almost as easy and IMO due to a better shaped butt plate probably handles recoil better than either.
Octagonal barrels initially were done more because it was easier and faster to machine them that way, possibly even with a hand file than to get a nice round profile. Eventually as machining caught up and it became easier to machine a consistent round barrel without variations in wall thickness or cosmetic flaws the octagonal became purely cosmetic.
The half round barrel gives you some of the weight and cosmetics of the octagonal while removing the weight from the last half of the barrel. Since the weight is removed from the muzzle end it handles faster than the octagonal. It gives you a different look and was often a custom shop or special order option back in the days of the original Winchester 92s & 86s or early 94s. I only own one of these and since it's a .22 single shot Winchester it is over built to heck and gone but it's still fun.