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Unread 04-11-2018, 08:26 PM   #1
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Michael D Cochran
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edgarspencer,

My .22 is a Savage Model 29 that is a tube fed pump from the mid '30s. I have never seen one like in your picture before. What brand and model is it?
Here is a link to some pics.
http://s821.photobucket.com/user/coc...20num%201127XX
Good luck getting all your parts together.

Michael
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Unread 04-12-2018, 07:50 AM   #2
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Originally Posted by Michael D Cochran View Post
edgarspencer,

My .22 is a Savage Model 29 that is a tube fed pump from the mid '30s. I have never seen one like in your picture before. What brand and model is it?
Here is a link to some pics.
http://s821.photobucket.com/user/coc...20num%201127XX
Good luck getting all your parts together.

Michael
Michael, That's a very crisp, original Model 29. I was directing my question to Mike Franzen, as the clip fed Savages are pretty scarce. The one I showed is a model 1903, and they are almost never seen. This one wouldn't have been seen again, but the nameless kid who left it leaning against a tree for a whole winter thought to save it. When it came to me, wrapped in a blanket, it was missing more than it had, and was rust from muzzle to butt, but, amazingly, very little of the rust left noticeable pits. Eventually, the original owner, who is becoming somewhat forgetful, found the bolt, then the clip, then a thumbscrew, which begs the question how many guns did he forget, as the thumbscrew is for another gun.
The model 61 Winchester is perhaps the most common of the slide handle repeaters, followed by the Remington model 12, but the 29 Savage, and especially the '03 Savage are rare as they made about 5% of what Winchester made.
A quick review of the last Julia auction will pop your socks as to where the .22 repeater market is going. Straight up like a bottle rocket.
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Unread 04-12-2018, 08:15 AM   #3
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Dean Romig
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Originally Posted by edgarspencer View Post
The one I showed is a model 1903, and they are almost never seen. This one wouldn't have been seen again, but the nameless kid who left it leaning against a tree for a whole winter thought to save it. When it came to me, wrapped in a blanket, it was missing more than it had, and was rust from muzzle to butt, but, amazingly, very little of the rust left noticeable pits. Eventually, the original owner, who is becoming somewhat forgetful, found the bolt, then the clip, then a thumbscrew, which begs the question how many guns did he forget, as the thumbscrew is for another gun.
.
Edgar, you knew this post would elicit a response from me... and you hoped I would too.

I have no isea how the little Savage came to be as rusty as it did. When it came to me as one of a bunch of guns given to me by the elderly sister of a fellow in Vt who had passed away a few years earlier, there was no thumb screw, no clip, and when I handed it to you it was missing the bolt. I had misplaced it. Some months later I found the bolt and sent it to you but despite both of our endless searching of the Internet and elsewhere, no clip could be found.
At least a year later while I was at grouse camp i was rummaging through an old bucket of odds & ends mixed with dust and mouse turds I discovered a little clip for a .22. I thought it might belong to a little .22 automatic pistol but I put it in my pocket and took it home with me as nobody who comes to grouse camp these days even has a .22. It must have been in that bucket for decades left there by "who knows who"...
And so I sent it to you Edgar, thinking maybe you, being the wizard of all things possible, could somehow make it work in the little Savage.

But I never expected the expletive laden response from you when you called to tell me it was the exact clip for the Savage and the accusations that it was I who inadvertantly and absent-mindedly brought it to Vermont and dropped it into that bucket.

And that, dear readers, is the rest of the story.





.
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"I'm a Setter man.
Not because I think they're better than the other breeds,
but because I'm a romantic - stuck on tradition - and to me, a Setter just "belongs" in the grouse picture."

George King, "That's Ruff", 2010 - a timeless classic.
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Unread 04-12-2018, 08:21 AM   #4
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Edgar, you knew this post would elicit a response from me... and you hoped I would too.

I have no isea how the little Savage came to be as rusty as it did. When it came to me as one of a bunch of guns given to me by the elderly sister of a fellow in Vt who had passed away a few years earlier, there was no thumb screw, no clip, and when I handed it to you it was missing the bolt. I had misplaced it. Some months later I found the bolt and sent it to you but despite both of our endless searching of the Internet and elsewhere, no clip could be found.
At least a year later while I was at grouse camp i was rummaging through an old bucket of odds & ends mixed with dust and mouse turds I discovered a little clip for a .22. I thought it might belong to a little .22 automatic pistol but I put it in my pocket and took it home with me as nobody who comes to grouse camp these days even has a .22. It must have been in that bucket for decades left there by "who knows who"...
And so I sent it to you Edgar, thinking maybe you, being the wizard of all things possible, could somehow make it work in the little Savage.

But I never expected the expletive laden response from you when you called to tell me it was the exact clip for the Savage and the accusations that it was I who inadvertantly and absent-mindedly brought it to Vermont and dropped it into that bucket.

And that, dear readers, is the rest of the story.
OK, Dean, now calm down and take your pills. We'll all eventually get this way so there's no reason to get upset.................poor Kathy.
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