It seems like it would be seriously fun. They could corner the market. If they did offer one, would you want one?
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It seems like it would be seriously fun. They could corner the market. If they did offer one, would you want one?
Absolutely! Along with .44-40 .45LC .44 special 44 mag. 41 mag.!
I'd be in for a 38/357 pump.
If enough people, ask Henry, it might sway them to make them.
Taurus offered one a while back. Not sure if still available but it was a loser. Not reliable or fast enough for CAS when I was into it.
Pumps offer no advantage over a lever action and history buried then for a reason.
Curious how so many shotguns, that use an even larger rimmed shell are working great.
Henry does respond to customer wishes. They started putting loading gates on their rifles in response to customer input.
If they get enough people asking for it, they just might do it.
I thought Rossi made some pumps.
I prefer lever actions myself, but those who like pumps should have them.
The issue a company must address is profitability. Designing and manufacturing a new gun is an expensive project. What a few hundred folks yearn for is not enough to justify it.
There is a lot of dreaming on the forum. People wanting guns chambered in obsolete calibers of the good old days is another popular topic. I am guilty too. I worked in manufacturing so understand why things I want ma not be worth producing.
I have no doubt that Henry makes a quality item, but they have never had a product that tugged my heart strings. Yet, if they were to make a really swell pump-action rifle, I'd start hunting for my checkbook...
I have a Henry single shot .357 Mag, reamed to Maximum, love it! A friend had a Remington pump .22, always liked it. If Henry offered a .357 pump, I'd find a way to get one! Course my 12 gauge 870 is still my favorite, it's like a natural extension of my arm, no thought required! hc18flyer
I would have to have one in 3030 and one in 357. Right next the levers in the cabinet.
Henry must have had requests for more than a "few hundred" to get them to put loading gates on their lever actions.
I would not have bought my Henry H010X .45-70 if it did not have a loading gate, because it would really a pain in the keister to remove the suppressor every time I needed to reload or unload it.
I did replace the plastic stocks with walnut ones I made myself, but Henry makes a beautiful set as replacements if you don't want or have the ability to make them yourself.
I only own three Henrys and really like them; I have the Henry made AR-7 survival rifle, the cheapest .22 lever action the make, and the H010X .45-70.
There is a lot of HDS out there (Henry Derangement Syndrome) but if you have one, they really grow on you.
I have a Pedersoli "Lightning Pump" in 44/40. A few teething problems but now utterly reliable. Another manufacturer of pumps would be great!
https://i.imgur.com/q8vH9K6l.jpg
I like and collect pump action rifles. But, ask IMI, Colt, Remington, Savage, Uberti, AWA why they don't make one. Not very many people want one, no money in it for the manufacturer and they are pretty expensive as a rule. Pedersoli is the last hold out as far as I know, and I wouldn't count on them for much longer. They haven't imported any since the plague. Shame really, they are pretty cool.
I would buy an a scaled down 870 with a tube magazine if it came in .360 BuckHammer or 45-70!
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I always thought the Timber Wolf was a nice gun. 357 and 44 mag.
A lot of people musta thought they were good for what you have to pay for one today on the used market.
They may not have the look of a western era Colt, but they sure were neat and handy.
im sure if there was enough demand to turn a profit it would get made. from gun shops ive visited in past 6 months or so they say everything in lever action flys off the rack since the popularity of Yellowstone and some other tv shows