Henry Side Gate Lever Rifle 30-30 Win with 5+1 Capacity 20" Barrel Blued Steel Finish & American Walnut Stock
The Henry Side Gate Lever Action offers up the best of both worlds with our standard removable tube magazine for safe and easy unloading and a side loading gate to keep the magazine topped off. The American walnut furniture is set off by intricate, deep checkering that will ensure a firm purchase on the stocks. A semi-buckhorn rear and brass bead front sight accompanies a 20" round blued steel barrel to deliver the accuracy you've come to expect from a Henry.
Brand Henry
Category Rifles
Model Side Gate
Caliber 30-30 Win
Barrel Length Range 20" to 20.99"
Capacity 5+1
Stock Material Wood
Action Lever
Oal 39"
Hand Right Hand
Sights Brass Bead Front / Adj Semi-Buckhorn Rear
Size Full Size
Barrel Finish Blued
Twist 1:12"
Application Field
Receiver Material Steel
Safety Transfer Bar
Barrel Description Steel
Barrel Length 20"
Length of Pull 14"
Max Capacity 5
Receiver Finish Blued
Weight 7 lbs
Stock Finish American Walnut
Caliber Dictionary
The Below Information Has Been Provided From Our Gun Caliber Dictionary And Is Meant For Informational Purposes Only. It Is Not Intended to Describe The Unique Specifications For This Ammunition.
The 30-30 Winchester (30 Winchester Center Fire or WCF) was introduced in Winchester's John Browning-designed Model 1894. The rifle was intended for smokeless powder…but the first smokeless powder sporting cartridges, the 30-30 and 25-35, weren't ready for release until 1895. Its "30-30" designation meant ".30-caliber, 30 grains of powder." This is a carryover from blackpowder designations, but 30 grains of smokeless powder gave the 30-30 unprecedented velocity for its day. The 30-30 quickly became America's gold-standard deer cartridge--and despite the many faster cartridges now available, it remains a very effective deer cartridge out to perhaps 150 yards. It has been chambered in single-shots and bolt-actions, but its traditional home is the tubular-magazine lever-action...which requires very blunt-nosed bullets, the lone exception being Hornady's FTX with a compressible polymer tip. All major manufacturers offer 30-30 ammuntion, and rifles are available from multiple sources. — Craig Boddington