![savage model 24 30-30 over 12 gauge for sale savage model 24 30-30 over 12 gauge for sale](https://www.gunsamerica.com/UserImages/118983/982342304/wm_1881496.jpg)
- #SAVAGE MODEL 24 30 30 OVER 12 GAUGE FOR SALE INSTALL#
- #SAVAGE MODEL 24 30 30 OVER 12 GAUGE FOR SALE MANUAL#
In 2016, Savage Arms introduced the Model 42 "Takedown" model which breaks down with the push of one button.
#SAVAGE MODEL 24 30 30 OVER 12 GAUGE FOR SALE INSTALL#
It features black plastic furniture and the adjustable rifle sights can be removed to install a scope base. The Model 42s barrels are 20 inches long, and the upper barrel fires. The Savage Model 42 combo-gun was introduced in 2012, as the successor to the Model 24. It also has a checkered stock and a shotgun bead sight. Like all later Model 24s, it uses a single trigger and single exposed hammer with a barrel selector lever incorporated into the hammer. The Savage Model 242 is virtually identical to the Model 24, except that both barrels are chambered for. Later models had the selector on the top of the exposed hammer (forward/down for shotgun barrel and back/up for the rifle barrel) with a cross-bolt hammer-block safety through the receiver.
#SAVAGE MODEL 24 30 30 OVER 12 GAUGE FOR SALE MANUAL#
The Stevens and early Savages models have one trigger and an exposed hammer, with a barrel selector on the right side of the receiver (up for the rifle barrel and down for the shotgun barrel) and no manual safety. As well as, a variety of finishes and grades. They came with both wood and plastic stocks that may or may not hold extra ammunition in the butt. And, the lower shotgun barrels were chambered for. The upper rifle barrels were chambered not only in. Over its many years of production, it was made in a number of versions, including a pistol grip model that is only 26 inches long. It may also be disassembled for ease of storage. 410 gauge model weighs 7 pounds, has 24-inch barrels and an overall length of 41-inches. In 1950, Stevens stopped making the 22-410, and Savage introduced the same gun as the Model 24. During World War II the United States Army Air Corps purchased some 15,000 Model 22-410s for use as survival guns. I missed one by $20 on gunbroker a while back.The Savage Model 24 was actually introduced by Stevens Arms as the Model 22-410 in 1938. No one wants to pay too much, and no one wants to sell a gun too cheap. That's just my "opinion".and we all know what they say about opinions! This has been lengthy, but I hope it helps. Unless your gun is in one of the extremes of good or bad, I'd say it would probably fit into the range of $350 - $450. The normal faults that apply to any other gun also apply to the Savage 24.rust, pitting, worn bluing, original furniture and finish, and cracks or splits in the furniture. Unmodified Savage 24s bring more than modified ones. Sometimes, the Gun Broker prices are a bit higher than the "local" market. 222s on the Gun Broker site than any other caliber. The price is also affected considerably by the caliber of the rifle barrel. To show you the wide range of prices on these guns, I've paid in a range of $75.00 to $550.00 over the last 10 to 15 years. The condition of the gun can swing the value quite a bit. Like I said, I'm no expert, but in these guns, one needs to physically examine each gun to determine it's fair market value. On the bottom (shotgun) barrels, I only have. In some of these I have multiples of the same caliber. I have them in the following rifle calibers. Some think they scarcer than hen's teeth and therefore should be worth a king's ransom. The prices are all over the page on the Savage 24s.
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222/20 gauge, and a few other caliber/gauge combinations, including one of the elusive 24C Camper's Companion models. I'm not a Savage 24 expert, but have been researching them for a few years and do own a few.