![]() ![]() 1968: no serial number prefix 1968 to present: letters used (in sequence) l-68, m-74, n-78, p-85, r-90 model 1100 letter suffix same structure as the model 870 listed above model 1187 letter prefix 1987 to present: 'pc' 12 ga., 1999 'tl' 20 ga., 2000 'sm' super mag. Remington was already up to ser# 71,48x in 1909 according to their findings.Įarly Remington repeaters are fine firearms. 410 bore (2 ½' or 3') model 1100 letter prefix 1963 to approx. Scroll down the thread to find the chart listing the ser#'s for the pre 11's. That s from looking at the chart in this link which is I believe derived from the Tipton article of 20yrs ago on the subject.ĭone with known ser#s and their shipping dates and extrapolation to fill in the blank areas, that's about the best there is around AFAIK. Serial Number Blocks: 12 gauge approximately 10,000 510,750 16 gauge approximately 1,500,000 1,557,000 20 gauge approximately 1,000,000 1,075,000. That simply meant that the gun was recv d by the Service Dept and Returned to the owner w/o having any work done to it.Ī ser# range of 35,000 should be somewhere betw 19 mfg'r. Same location as where the Bbl Date Codes are stamped.Ī Repair Code is the Month/Yr Letter code followed by the number '3'Īnther return to factory Date Code after 1921 you might find on an early gun would be one followed by a '4' The gun would have then gotten a Repair Code stamped onto the bbl. On older models, the serial number is located on the left side of the receiver, while newer models have it engraved on the right side of the receiver or on the left side of the barrel near the receiver. One sent back to Remington for repair AFTER 1921. You may however see a Repair Code on the bbl of a pre-11. The Remington Model 11-48 came in 12, 16, and 20 gauge variations. If you find a 'date code' on the bbl,and the bbl matches the frame,the gun itself is at least a 1921 mfr.ġ921 is when Remington started using the Bbl Date Code system. Ser# on pre Mod11 should be on the bottom of the action/frame ahead of the loading/carrier port. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |