The Official 2nd Amendment Appreciation Thread

Anybody know a place I can shoot .308 in Knoxville. I only found one place with bench shooting.

John Sevier range is good. TWRA runs it, Fountain City area. They used to supply you with sand bags, targets, eyes/ears, etc. but I haven't been in years.
 
would that barrel not get hot when you have to slide the chamber forward? I know its a back up pistol but that was the first thing I thought of.
 
Off topic, but anyone out there have any expertise in WW2 era Japanese swords? My Father brought what I think is an Officers sword and trying to find appraiser in Knoxville. I also have a Japanese rifle.
 
So, $2,000 and up for a pistol that has to be manually operated for each shot and only holds five rounds? And furthermore, will kick the ever living crap out of your hand?

I'll pass.

makes $3900 + for a Wilson, Nighthawk or Guncrafter look like a bargin
 
Those looking for a 6.5 Grendel complete rifle, get your credit cards out:

http://www.larue.com/65-grendel-fde

grendel-main.jpg
 
1965 Marlin 39a .22 lever action
1965 markin bolt action shotgun 20ga

I'll safely assume that's a "Marlin" bolt action SG.

Of the two, the .22 is actually more valuable. Prices ranging from $350-650 on Gunbroker and Armslist. A couple of folks are asking more, but likely nobody's taking it. I'd say asking $500-600 depending on surface finish and bore/parts wear isn't unreasonable.

The shotgun...isn't necessarily that valuable. Is it a Glenfield model? Should be on the receiver stamp somewhere. But I'd say between $150-250 will be about what you're going to get. They just aren't that popular.

These prices are through private sales only. The 39a has an almost cult like following when it comes to .22 repeaters and you'll get a far better price from someone either looking for a nostalgia shooter or to replace one they might have sold years ago. The date is what can help sell it since the guns built in that time frame are considered "better" quality than the assembly line production pieces today.

Fun fact, the Model 39a descends from the Model 39 which in turn descends from the Model 1891, the same rifle Annie Oakley used in her exhibition shooting.
 
I'll safely assume that's a "Marlin" bolt action SG.

Of the two, the .22 is actually more valuable. Prices ranging from $350-650 on Gunbroker and Armslist. A couple of folks are asking more, but likely nobody's taking it. I'd say asking $500-600 depending on surface finish and bore/parts wear isn't unreasonable.

The shotgun...isn't necessarily that valuable. Is it a Glenfield model? Should be on the receiver stamp somewhere. But I'd say between $150-250 will be about what you're going to get. They just aren't that popular.

These prices are through private sales only. The 39a has an almost cult like following when it comes to .22 repeaters and you'll get a far better price from someone either looking for a nostalgia shooter or to replace one they might have sold years ago. The date is what can help sell it since the guns built in that time frame are considered "better" quality than the assembly line production pieces today.

Fun fact, the Model 39a descends from the Model 39 which in turn descends from the Model 1891, the same rifle Annie Oakley used in her exhibition shooting.


Wow thanks for the info! So you recommend me selling it on on of those two sites ? I might just keep it since it is so old. Im also selling a taurus millennium pro if you know anyone interested..
 
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