• You are using the old High Contrast theme. We have installed a new dark theme for you, called UI.X. This will work better with the new upgrade of our software. You can select it at the bottom of any page.

Question Regarding the Winchester Model 100 Rifle

Status
Not open for further replies.

SwampWolf

Member
Joined
Sep 18, 2005
Messages
7,645
Location
North Central Ohio
Yesterday, I attended a gun show in Wilmington, Ohio where I spotted a Winchester Model 100 carbine with a smooth stock (that is, no checkering or "basket-weave" impressions), chambered in .358 Winchester! Because I'm sure that the Model 100 was never cataloged in cartridges other than .243, .308 and .284, I assumed that this rifle must have been converted to .358 by the owner but the seller assured me that the rifle in question was, in fact, a factory rendition (he claims to have seen a couple of others so chambered by the factory over the years). A careful examination of the rifle persuaded me that the rifle, indeed, came from the factory in this chambering.

Now, I'm not a student, per se, of the Model 100 rifle but I've been very acquainted with it ever since I killed my first deer with one back in 1964 and I've never heard of one being chambered in .358 caliber by the factory. I can only suppose that the factory accomodated a special order by a customer(s) "back in the day"; not withstanding that converting a semi-auto rifle to a different cartridge (even if the new one was spawned by a parent case-in this instance, .308 to .358) poses a much more difficult transition than would be encountered if changing chamberings in rifles with bolt-action, lever-action or single-shot configurations.

So I'm wondering if anyone on the forum knows more about the history of the Model 100 being chambered in .358 Winchester? I have to say that I think that a Model 100 carbine, chambered in .358 Winchester, would make for a superb woods rifle for hunting deer or black bear in heavy cover.
 
It's a dang good, and hard, question. The last time we discussed this on THR, October 2011, we couldn't actually come up with a definitive answer...

Would make a hell of a black bear gun, though...(pretty good on hogs, too)
 
I wish I would have copied the serial number down from the rifle I was looking at (just to see if it was close to the number of the rifle being discussed in the above referenced 2011 thread). I am positive about one thing though: the roll-mark/stamping on the barrel of the rifle I was looking at appeared to be straight from the factory.
 
Status
Not open for further replies.
Back
Top