Redsetter wrote on Aug 20
th, 2018 at 12:13am:
waterman wrote on Aug 19
th, 2018 at 6:12pm:
Not exact, but the first three digits (example 126,XXX).
Why not "exact"? Indulge in that silliness on the Winchester Collectors Forum (of which Bert is the Chief Sachem), & other members will inflict the derision such foolishness deserves.
My interest is in the SPAN of SNs shipped in any particular batch, not in the SN itself. If the subject rifle is included in both the Winchester records and the specific contract data, that provides some sort of time marker. I could compare that with the SNs of my three Model 87 Single Shots to get some idea of the year of assembly.
But with Gov't contract training rifles, there is no great assurance that receivers were selected in numerical order. Put the Military Training Rifle contracts in context with everything that Winchester did during the 1914-1919 period. The contracts were far less than 0.02 of 1 % of Winchester's business. Williamson's economic history covers a lot and does not even mention those contracts. Winchester made hundreds of thousands of P14s, almost half a million Model 1917s, almost 50,000 Model 1918 BARs, military versions of the 1897 and 1912 (?) shotguns, plus military versions of the 1907 and 1910 WSL rifles, plus the 236,000 Russian contract 1895s, plus the 1917 Browning machine guns, plus a bunch of special equipment, artillery parts, sights, etc., etc. Plus continuing to offer their whole catalog of civilian guns, plus doing the developmental work on the Model 52 bolt action .22 target rifle and what would eventually become the Model 54 in .30-06.
They did all that with employees who were not trained to the same level of skill as normal peacetime employees. The days of the Single Shot were over. It was an economic loser. The Training Rifle contract gave Winchester an excuse to use up what would have been surplus parts. As time progressed, the work got sloppier. My highest number (very near the end of the line, > 132,000) is a far less desirable rifle than either of my lower numbered 87s. I believe the stories about no heat treating, etc. They were putting together military training rifles with parts that would otherwise be surplus or scrap, and turned them out with less-than-usual attention to detail. That they work and shoot as well as they do is a tribute to a really good design.