Remington SERIAL NUMBERS 1921-2012
- Modern Remington barrels are stamped with a Date/Code, which denotes when it was made. Remington Year of Manufacture Codes maybe found on the barrel of your Remington shotgun, on the left side, just forward of the receiver. The first letter of the Code is the month of manufacture, followed by one or two letters which are the year of manufacture.
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Remingtons manufactured after 1921 have a code located on the left side of the barrel near the frame that identifies the year and month of manufacture.
B – Jan L – Feb A – Mar C – Apr K – May P – Jun
O – Jul W – Aug D – Sep E – Oct R – Nov X – Dec
M – 1921 N – 1922 P – 1923 R – 1924 S – 1925
T – 1926 U – 1927 W – 1928 X – 1929 Y – 1930
Z – 1931 A – 1932 B – 1933 C – 1934 D – 1935
Here's another list with some of the letter codes for the serial numbers. If you can't figure it out, maybe some of the 1100 gurus might chime in with some thoughts. Or, maybe you could post some pictures. Den REMINGTON SHOTGUN SERIAL NUMBER STRUCTURE M/870 LETTER PREFIX 1950 TO APPROX 1968: NO SERIAL NUMBER PREFIX.
E – 1936 F – 1937 G – 1938 H – 1939 J – 1940
K – 1941 L – 1942 MM – 1943 NN – 1944 PP – 1945
RR – 1946 SS – 1947 TT – 1948 UU – 1949 WW – 1950
XX – 1951 YY – 1952 ZZ – 1953 A – 1954 B – 1955
C – 1956 D – 1957 E – 1958 F – 1959 G – 1960
H – 1961 J – 1962 K – 1963 L – 1964 M – 1965
N – 1966 P – 1967 R – 1968 S – 1969 T – 1970
U – 1971 W – 1972 X – 1973 Y – 1974 Z – 1975
I – 1976 O – 1977 Q – 1978 V – 1979 A – 1980
B – 1981 C – 1982 D – 1983 E – 1984 F – 1985
G – 1986 H – 1987 I – 1988 J – 1989 K – 1990
L – 1991 M – 1992 N – 1993 O – 1994 P – 1995
Q – 1996 R – 1997 S – 1998 T – 1999 U – 2000
V – 2001 W – 2002 X – 2003 Y – 2004 Z – 2005
A – 2006 B – 2007 C – 2008 D – 2009 E – 2010
F – 2011 G – 2012 Wwe raw game free download for android.
Remington XP-100 | |
---|---|
Type | |
Place of origin | United States |
Production history | |
Designer | Remington Arms Company |
Designed | 1961 |
Manufacturer | Remington Arms Company |
Produced | 1963–1998 |
Variants | XP-100 Varmint Special, XP-100 Silhouette, XP-100 Hunter, XP-100 Custom, XP-100R, XR-100 Rangemaster |
Specifications | |
Mass | 1.7 kg (3.7 lb) with iron sights and 270 mm (10.75') barrel |
Length | 360 mm or 460 mm (14 in or 18 in) |
Barrel length | 270 mm or 370 mm (10.75 in or 14.5 in) |
Cartridge | .221 Fireball, .22-250 Remington, .223 Remington, .250 Savage, 6mm BR Remington, 7mm BR Remington, 7mm-08 Remington, .308 Winchester, .35 Remington |
Action | Bolt action |
Effective firing range | 200–300 m |
Maximum firing range | 300 m |
Sights | Iron sights on original version, Optical scope |
The Remington XP-100 (from eXperimental Pistol number 100) is a bolt-actionpistol produced by Remington Arms from 1963 to 1998. The XP-100 was one of the first handguns designed for long-range shooting, and introduced the .221 Fireball and 6×45mm. The XP-100 was noted for its accuracy and is still viewed as competitive today in the sport of handgunvarminting, which it helped create,[1] as well as in metallic silhouette shooting.
Overview[edit]
The XP-100 was based on Remington's short action bolt action carbine, the Remington Model 40X, which influenced the later Remington Model 600 rifle.[2] The XP-100 was initially introduced with a 103⁄4 in (270 mm) barrel set into a nylon stock with an unusual center-mounted grip. Chambered in .222 Remington in early prototypes, the short barrel produced significant noise and muzzle flash. Subsequently the case was shortened to reduce powder capacity to a volume more suited to the shorter barrel of a pistol. The resulting cartridge, the .221 Fireball, produced factory loaded velocities of over 825 m/s (2,700 ft/s) from the short barrel, and accuracy rivaling the parent .222 Remington, one of the most accurate cartridges made.[1]
All but the XP-100R model were single-shot designs, while the XP-100R had a small internal magazine (holding four rounds), similar to most bolt-action rifles. The R model - for 'repeater' - was made 1991-1997 in .223 Rem., .250 Savage, 7mm-08 Rem., .308 Win., .35 Rem., and 350 Rem. Mag. It was reintroduced in 1998, this time without sights, in .223 Rem., .22-250 Rem., .260 Rem., and .35 Rem.[2]
Model history[edit]
The XP-100 went through a number of changes during its production run, and many variations were only available through the Remington Custom shop. The most significant changes in the later versions were to barrel length, which went to 141⁄2 in (370 mm), and the grip location, which was moved to the rear of the stock. Stocks with a rear grip uses standard Remington 700 triggers, while stocks with a center grip need a special trigger linkage system with a long transfer bar. The calibers changed; with the elimination of the original 103⁄4 in (270 mm) barrel, the reduced powder capacity was no longer such a requirement, and the chamberings switched to standard commercial rifle cartridges. By the time the XP-100 was canceled, it faced stiff competition from other bolt-action pistols such as the Savage Striker as well as the versatile Thompson Center Armsbreak-actionContender.[2]
James Files contended that he fired the fatal head shot that killed President John F. Kennedy from behind the fence on the 'grassy knoll' using the Remington XP-100 .221 Fireball on November 22, 1963 in Dallas, TX.
Model production by year[edit]
- XP-100 (1963–1985)
- XP-100 Varmint Special (1986–1992)
- XP-100 Silhouette (1980–1997)
- XP-100 Hunter (1993–1994)
- XP-100 Custom (1986–1997)[3]
- XP-100R (1998)[4]
- XR-100 (2005–Present)[5]
Caliber production by year[edit]
1964 Remington 1100
- .221 Remington Fireball (1963–1985)
- 7 mm BR Remington (1980–1985)
- .223 Remington (1986–1997), (2005–Present in XR-100)
- .35 Remington (1986–1997)
- 350 Rem. Mag (1991-1997)
- .250 Savage (1990–1992) Custom Shop only
- 6 mm BR Remington (1990–1992) Custom Shop only
- .22-250 Remington (1992–1994) Custom Shop only, (2005–Present in XR-100)
- .308 Winchester (1992–1994) Custom Shop only
- 7 mm-08 Remington (1993–1994)
- .204 Ruger (2005–Present in XR-100)[3][4][5]
Current production[edit]
The XP-100 action was used as the basis for a new single-shot rifle from Remington called the XR-100 Rangemaster.[5]
While the XP-100 has disappeared from Remington's lineup (Remington is primarily a maker of rifles and shotguns), the .221 Fireball remains in production. The Model 700 rifle has been available since 2002 in a .221 Fireball chambering; while it lacks the velocity attainable with the vastly more popular .223 Remington, the short .221 Fireball delivers most of the performance with far less noise and flash.[6]
Factory recall[edit]
1963 Remington 1100 Serial Numbers Year
In 1979, XP-100 pistols and Remington Model 600 rifles were recalled because of a safety issue. The bolt was fully locked when the safety was on, making it impossible to unload the gun with the safety on. Remington made a free modification available that allowed the bolt to open while the gun was on safe, allowing it to be unloaded while the gun was still on safe.[1]
See also[edit]
References[edit]
- ^ abcMarshall, John (October 2007). 'Classic Handguns: The Remington XP-100 .221 Fireball Single-shot Pistol'. The Blue Press by Dillon (#184): 36–37.
- ^ abcMarcot, Roy Martin (2005). The history of Remington Firearms. Globe Pequot. p. 40. ISBN978-1-59228-690-4.
- ^ ab'Remington Arms' Firearm Model History for the XP-100'. Archived from the original on 2009-12-13.
- ^ ab'Remington Arms Firearm Model History for the XP-100R'. Archived from the original on 2006-10-15.
- ^ abc'XR-100 Rangemaster history'. Archived from the original on 2007-12-09.
- ^'The Reload Bench page on the .221 Fireball'.[self-published source]