This Technical Note identifies the visible screw and pin variations found on Winchester 1894 rifles and carbines, using only public sources and observed patterns. Screw head shape, dome curvature, thread pitch, and indexing marks are essential for detecting rework, replaced parts, or mismatched configurations.

Era Markers — Heads, Threads & Dome Geometry

Early screws (1894–1910) feature slightly domed heads with finer milling marks and deeper slots. Interwar examples show more uniform curvature and slot depth, while late pre-64 screws exhibit more industrial consistency and sometimes broader slot profiles. These visible changes help confirm a rifle’s claimed era.

Pin Profiles & Retention Geometry

Magazine, lever, and carrier pins exhibit subtle but consistent differences across production eras. This TN documents only those patterns visible on surviving rifles and consistent across public examples.

Specifications — TN-10 Scope

  • Category: Small Parts & Hardware
  • Focus: Screw/pin geometry and era consistency checks
  • Eras Covered: 1894–1963
  • Used In: Chapters 10, 17, 18, 21
  • Related TNs: TN-21 (Action Architecture), TN-09 (Sights)

Citations (Source-Based)

Public photography of factory-original 1894 rifles; museum-piece macro images showing screw heads and pins; high-quality auction imagery; Winchester catalogs listing screw sets; cross-verified references describing hardware evolution in pre-64 Winchester firearms.