Winchester Model 54 | |
---|---|
Type | Rifle |
Place of origin | United States |
Production history | |
Designer | Thomas Crosley Johnson |
Manufacturer | Winchester Repeating Arms Company |
Produced | 1925–1930 |
No. built | 50,145 |
Variants | Standard Grade, Carbine, Super Grade, Target |
Specifications | |
Weight | 7¾ lb. (Standard Grade, 24 in. barrel), 11¾ lb. (Sniper's Rifle), 8 lb. (Super Grade), 7¼ lb. (Carbine) |
|
|
Cartridge | various, see article |
Barrels | 24 in. (Standard Grade), 20 in. (Carbine), 26 in. heavy (Sniper's Rifle) |
Action | bolt |
Feed system | Non-detachable box magazine, holding 5 cartridges |
Sights | open |
The Winchester Model 54 is a bolt-action rifle manufactured by the Winchester Repeating Arms Company. The 54 was the first successful production run civilian centerfire bolt action for Winchester.
Using a Mauser 98-type action, the 54 was a less-expensive derivation of the limited-production handmade Model 51 "Imperial" of 1919. The Model 54 was produced until 1936 when, with some modifications, it was reintroduced as the Winchester Model 70. The Model 54 had a relatively heavy two stage trigger pull, which was greatly improved in the Model 70.
Standard chamberings included the .22 Hornet, .220 Swift, .250-3000 Savage, .257 Roberts, .270 Winchester, 30-30 Winchester, .30-06 Springfield, 7x57mm Mauser, 7.65x53mm Argentine, and 9x57mm Mauser. Special order chamberings were made in .25-35 Winchester, .32 Winchester Special, and .35 Whelen.
Introduced prior to the popularity of telescopic sights, it was intended for use with open or aperture sights, and the bolt throw makes the addition of a scope difficult.