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Talk:Winchester Model 1892

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Additional Images

Winchester Model 1892 Saddle Ring Carbine, half magazine - .25-20 W.C.F.
Denix "Mod.92 carbine" non-firing replica (model 1068/G)
A Winchester Model 1892 (.44-40) from Breakdown; the weapon pictured here is the actual screen-used rifle from the film, as it appeared in a 2018 Heritage Auctions listing.
Opposite view of the screen-used Winchester Model 1892 from Breakdown.

Discussion

Magazine Capacity?

Could someone explain the exact capacity of the different models, this has confused me for long now. Upon Google searching for answers, i see some say the Carbine holds 12 rounds, while others say 15. And some say the Rifle can hold 16 or 17 rounds instead of 15. And no one specifies ammunition. Exactly how many rounds can the Winchester 92' Carbine and Rifle hold respectively, in 44-40 Ammunition?

Thanks in Advance. Z008MJ (talk) 08:01, 24 May 2013 (EDT)

According to this, it's ten rounds. This has it at ten rounds as well. --Funkychinaman (talk) 09:23, 24 May 2013 (EDT)

Thanks, i have some more questions regarding that if you don't mind. Does both have ten rounds, or just the carbine? What ammunition gives it the commonly heard 12 and 15 rounds? Does the Winchester 1873 have the exact same capacity as the 1892 or is there a there difference? Z008MJ (talk) 18:00, 24 May 2013 (EDT)

That's just what I got from Google. I think that info is available because it looks like the carbine is the only 1892 Winchester still has in production. You might want to look on auction sites for specs on longer barrels. --Funkychinaman (talk) 10:51, 24 May 2013 (EDT)

This isn't regarding currently available 1892's, but 92's, and 73's, in general. I ask because i want to know, i'm not getting one. I looked again now, and many people, even owners of it, have said it has a capacity of 12-15, in 44-40. I want to know if a 19th century .44-40 73/92 Winchester Carbine holds 12, 15, or another capacity, or if all of them are available? Z008MJ (talk) 18:00, 24 May 2013 (EDT)

I know I am late to this conversation. Google might tell you the capacity of modern copies, but may not reflect capacity of original guns in original calibers. Sources don't always distinguish between magazine capacity and total capacity (full magazine +1 in the firing chamber).
Due to political reasons, some modern imported leveraction rifles were limited to ten round capacity. In 2012 discussions on The FiringLine and SASS Wire mentioned upping the magazine capacity on Rossi 1892 clones by removing a white plastic spacer screwed onto the magazine end plug.
The modern 1892 clones with full length magazines, 16" barrel models held 8 rounds, 20" barrel models held 10 rounds and 24" barrel models held 12 rounds. The Garate El Tigre 1892 clone with 22" barrel held 12 .44-40 rounds. Those are magazine capacity. (My Rossi Puma M92 (LSI import) 20" barrel held 10 rounds in the magazine with plug, 11 rounds w/o the plug.)
The original Henry and Winchester 1866 rifles used the .44 Henry cartridge 1.35" long compared with the 1.6" length of more modern pistol/carbine cartridges (.357 Mag, .44 mag, .44-40, .45 Colt). An original Henry rifle would hold 16 .44 Henry cartridges but a modern replica in .44-40 or .45 Colt holds 13 rounds. --Carl N. Brown (talk) 10:16, 21 February 2017 (EST)

Fanning The Hammer?

I was watching the Rifleman episode 'Duel of Honor' and I caught something odd and I've been meaning to ask this: Can you fan-fire this gun? Right near the end during the titular duel, Lucas apparently fires the gun by fanning the hammer (just one round) out and I've never seen this done before. --SeanWolf (talk) 16:15, 13 May 2020 (EDT)


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