Savage 110 Serial Number Production Dates
Savage 110 Serial Number Production Dates ::: https://blltly.com/2t88CS
I have a Savage Model 110, 7mm Rem Mag with the serial number F76xx15. I'm trying to get all my guns info on record and was wondering if anyone could tell me the year of manufacture for this rifle? Ive had this rifle for several years now and have looked relentlessly it seems, but absolutly. Savage Arms beixf; phpsdk; phpsdk1.4.18 Other web sites may contain additional or more complete serial number records for older Savage rifles. Of your Savage 1895/1899/99 in the box below: American Rifleman (July, If the firearm is manufactured after 1995, we will be able to service it. SAVAGE REPAIR SERVICES Savage Arms will provide service on all current firearms manufactured after Nov. 1, 1995 (serial #F498821 and above). We regret we are unable to provide service for firearms made prior to this date. Discontinued or obsolete, a current model that has been revised, firearms will be subject to component inventory availability. 756,000-775,000 made in 1955 775,000-800,000 made in 1956 800,000-900,000 are very uncommon, only 502 99's were made inbetween this serial range most of them starting with 835,XXX as the first three numbers. 900,000-925,000 made in 1956.
The .380 caliber model was introduced in 1913, with serial numbering starting at No. 1, and with the letter B added. Curiously, in some specimens this letter is used as a prefix to the serial number while in other specimens it will be found used as a suffix thereto. This pistol followed the design of the .32 cal. 1907 Model. In 1915, however, a modified version of both the .32 and .380 appeared; this modification consisted of the addition of a grip safety (which was commendable) and the elimination of the hammer-shaped cocking lever that was exposed at the rear end of the slide in the original model. This 1915 version is usually referred to as the Hammerless Model, though that is a misnomer since no Savage pistol has a hammer. The new model was numbered in continuation of the same series as the original .32 and .380. The Hammerless model was short lived, as its manufacture was discontinued in 1917 in favor of a new-style external cocking lever, which had a spur shape rather than the smaller, rounded (or dome shaped) piece formerly used. This was a desirable change for three reasons. The spur-shaped cocking piece made it easier to cock the weapon by hand, and its observable position told the user whether the arm was cocked or not. It also made it possible to carry a cartridge in the barrel with the arm uncocked, by letting down the cocking piece (carefully) after a cartridge had been chambered by pulling back the slide. With the original cocking piece this was a very dangerous procedure and with the Hammerless model obviously impossible. With the Hammerless model one could not tell, from external examination, whether there was a cartridge in the chamber. The new model still retained one undesirable feature (present in all models) in that the recoil spring is so stiff that drawing back the slide to chamber a cartridge is a difficult operation-almost as difficult as in the case of the Dreyse. Another noticeable change which has been observed on Mod. 1907 pistols of late issue (serial numbers above 200,000, presumably ca. 1917) is the style of the serrations in the finger grips on the rear of the slide. Originally these were wide, deep, and 9 in number, while in the later issue they were much narrower and 28 in number.
Another .25 cal. Savage, having a shorter barrel and frame, but otherwise like the former, has been reported-the design of which dates from 1916 or 1917. The entry of the U.S. into the World War seems to have prevented this pistol from being offered commercially. After the war, sometime in 1919, plans for its manufacture were resumed and a few were made, fully marked and bearing serial numbering which started at 1000-M. Only a very few have been seen and, no doubt, most of those that were made are now in the hands of collectors.
Between 1910 and 1915 several minor variant forms of the .32 cal. Mod. 1907 pistol appeared. These included types with lanyard loops, cartridgeindicating collars around the barrel at the chamber, and variant styles of sights. The types that were fitted with lanyard loops may have been furnished on contract for police use, since they usually have registry serial numbers on the right side of the frame.
595,000-620,000 made in 1951620,000-652,000 made in 1952652,000-720,000 made in 1953720,000-756,000 made in 1954756,000-775,000 made in 1955775,000-800,000 made in 1956800,000-900,000 are very uncommon, only 502 99's were made inbetween this serial range most of them starting with 835,XXX as the first three numbers.900,000-925,000 made in 1956925,000-952,000 made in 1957952,000-960,000 made in 1958960,000-968,000 made in 1959
2) Colt M1911A1 Canadian Contract: S/N 930,000 to 936,000 = 1943 ( 1,515 military model pistols were shipped to Canada through the Lend-Leased Act from this serial number range.) Caliber .45 ACP
4) Colt M1911 British RAF Contract: S/N W91,100 to W110,696 = Jan. 22, 1918 to April 28, 1919 (Approx. 10,000 pistols were shipped to the Royal Air Force from this serial number range and were .455 Webley caliber.)
This page will help you ascertain when your Crosman gun was in production. In the year 1975 Crosman Corporation began to use a serial number system that can help you identify when your gun was made. Prior to 1975 our serial number system was limited only to warranty concerns.
If your Crosman airgun was manufactured after July of 1975, the first three or four digits of the serial number indicate the month and year the gun was built. For example if the first three or four digits of the serial number were 1179 or N79 then your gun was manufactured in November of 1979.
Our database contains values of serial numbers through 566,000 which ended the year 1950. Serials did not strictly run sequentially. Therefore, dates may be a year different, especially near the "boundaries". Enter the serial number (leave out the "," or ".") of your Savage 1895/1899/99 in the box below:
American Rifleman (July, 1980; page 28) contains a very different set of dates for serial numbers through 193000. Enter the serial number (leave out the "," or ".") of your Savage 1895/1899 in the box below:
Savage serial numbers run intermingled with all models coming off the assembly lines, so a model 99 may have had a consecative number to a model 110 or 24. Since I knew the date code from being a old Savage warranty station, I was able to pinpoint his request. 2b1af7f3a8