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1Shirt
01-27-2014, 12:38 PM
Did the gun show in Lincoln this weekend. One guy had a rack of Nylon 66's (old 22 semi autos) about 10 or more of them, with price tags of $450.00 or more (and some of them were pretty rough). If memory serves me right these new were under $50.00, and were by no means the most accurate 22's back then, compared to a lot of others on the market. Gun values at this show were for the most part someplace between out of this world and stupid. That said, it is currently a sellers market: obviously.

As a side note, there was little powder, almost no primers, no 22's in quantity (a couple of guys asking 12.50 or more for a few boxes of 50 rds), and with the exception of the most common of cals little brass, and what there was was pretty steep.
1Shirt!::coffeecom

454PB
01-27-2014, 12:40 PM
I bought one at a gun show some 25 years ago....I think I gave $60 at the time.

Though really ugly, it shoots great and is very light.

CastingFool
01-27-2014, 12:44 PM
Last gun show I attended, I found a Nylon 66, with the black stock, for $180. The rifle was not in the best of shape, but I though the price was reasonable. No need or desire for another 66. The one I have has the Mohawk brown stock, purchased in 1973 from a buddy for $30. I agree with you, definitely not the most accurate .22 around. My kids liked to shoot it, because it was light, and recoil was minimal

garym1a2
01-27-2014, 12:55 PM
Just cause they ask high prices does not mean tthey sell. He probally took most of them home.

ratitude
01-27-2014, 12:56 PM
My dad's old Nylon 66 was my first rifle. Still have it along with his brother's 512 Sportmaster.

SP5315
01-27-2014, 01:14 PM
I'm willing to bet he still had that rack of Nylon 66's at the end of the show. I picked up a pair in the mid 80's for somewhere around 50 bucks each. You got to wounder where they come up with the prices that they want for a used no frills rifle like the Nylon 66. When I see prices like that I just chuckle and move on to the next table.

jcwit
01-27-2014, 01:22 PM
Around here they SELL "yes sell" for around $200 to $300, depending on condition.

Bad Water Bill
01-27-2014, 01:47 PM
When they came out I could have bought one at a Rem reps price but did not.

It is PLASTIC, drop it and the stock will shatter is what I thought.

The retail price was about 1/2 of what my weeks check was at that time.

About 10 years ago my son saw one at Gander in Wausau Wi.

Problem was I live in Il so would have to wait 24 hours to take possession (Il law applied) so they shipped it to a store near me.

Total cost was $100.00 for a gun in just out of the box condition,not a scratch or mar anywhere.

About what I made in 1/2 a days work at the time.

Yes we must factor in inflation.

Mine shoots as good as I can.

A nice rifle for youngsters AND old reprobates.:bigsmyl2:

VA Shooter
01-27-2014, 02:02 PM
I had one and a guy wanted it and he offered me $425 I TOOK IT. He resold it for $555 still cant understand it

KCSO
01-27-2014, 02:13 PM
Nylons are now collectors items with ome of the rarer colours and models going for sky high prices. I have a fellow local who has a bolt action nylon that he wants $750 for.

Bent Ramrod
01-27-2014, 02:47 PM
The only real "collector's item" in the Nylon series is the chrome plated bolt action job. All the autoloaders are very common. But as a wise man behind a gun show table told me once, "Last week's socks are now 'Collector's Items.''

Remington had improved the Tenite plastic enormously by the time the Nylon 66 came out. They still had to do a lot of "torture test" advertising to overcome the reluctance in the market, which still remembered the shatter-prone Tenite stocks on the Stevens rifle/shotgun combos.

The Nylon's selling point was that it could live in the trunk of a car or the bilge of a canoe without any functional problems. Strictly a working tool.

Hardcast416taylor
01-27-2014, 03:08 PM
Back in the mid `60`s a friend and I would shoot up the rat population at the town garbage dump when it was pushed back with a grader dozer. He had a Rem. 552 BDL and I had a Rem. 550-A. We really were bad news to the rats. One day another guy was trying to shoot up the rats with a Nylon 66. He couldn`t hit a bull in the a$$ with that thing! We swapped off with him and he was hitting rats nicely with our rifles. We on the other hand had to contend with the wandering zero of his 66 and soon swapped it back to him. That soured me on ever getting one of those things. Soon after I started buying 10/22`s and have never looked back.Robert

Iowa Fox
01-27-2014, 03:24 PM
I paid $35 for mine way back when that's what they were selling for. My boys really gave it a work out when they got old enough to shoot it, I'm not sure how many rounds fired in it. Guess would be about 60K. I don't ever remember a failure to feed, fire or eject. It still looks as good as new as it never got beat around, just spent a lot of time on the tin can range behind the barn. It has certainly earned its position of retirement in the safe along with the other retirees. Good little rifles but I never dreamt I would see them sell for the prices they are bringing. But then again I never dreamt my model 42 Winchester could sell for the prices they bring, another one on retirement row in the safe.

snuffy
01-27-2014, 03:31 PM
Judas priest, what's mine worth!!??żż[smilie=1:

It's a 6 round mag fed brown plastic stock with a white diamond in the forearm and a black tip. I was told at one time that not many of that configuration were made.

Alvarez Kelly
01-27-2014, 03:35 PM
Judas priest, what's mine worth!!??żż[smilie=1:

It's a 6 round mag fed brown plastic stock with a white diamond in the forearm and a black tip. I was told at one time that not many of that configuration were made.

That sounds like mine, but it says "77" on it. I was told the 66s are tube feed, the ones with a magazine are later models. I don't know that it's a fact. Anyone know either way?

CastingFool
01-27-2014, 03:48 PM
If I remember correctly, the 77's were like a lever action. It's my understanding if you have a 66 with the green stock, those are the ones worth some money

Bad Water Bill
01-27-2014, 03:48 PM
The model 66 was introduced in 1959.

The model 77 was introduced in 1970 so you have a youngster there.:bigsmyl2:

Alvarez Kelly
01-27-2014, 03:53 PM
My dad has the lever action with a Nylon stock. I can't remember the model number, but it is not a 66. My 77 is a semi-auto.

AkMike
01-27-2014, 04:02 PM
I've got one with the plastic stock that's a bolt action. I'd have to dig it out to see the model number.

Bad Water Bill
01-27-2014, 04:14 PM
I've got one with the plastic stock that's a bolt action. I'd have to dig it out to see the model number.

WARNING Plastic stocks shatter in the Alazka kold.

Better ship it to me for exercise and safe storage.:bigsmyl2:

William Yanda
01-27-2014, 04:22 PM
Dint you see that temps in AK (Fairbanks) were about 30 deg higher than Chicago recently?



WARNING Plastic stocks shatter in the Alazka kold.

Better ship it to me for exercise and safe storage.:bigsmyl2:

Roy Acuffff
01-27-2014, 04:27 PM
The Remington Model 76 was the lever action version, if I remember correctly they were only made for a few years.

Roy

Bad Water Bill
01-27-2014, 04:37 PM
Not sure where Chicago is. :kidding:

Yes I do know we will be looking at -20-25 with a wind chill that could possibly freeze a politicians mouth tonight here in Chiraq.

B H Os home town.

AkMike
01-27-2014, 04:38 PM
WARNING Plastic stocks shatter in the Alazka kold.

Better ship it to me for exercise and safe storage.:bigsmyl2:


It's almost 40 here. Hardly cold nor worth the effort to send it down thataway!

starmac
01-27-2014, 04:42 PM
It is funny, back when them things were plentiful and cheap, I wouldn't even look at one at any price, now I would kind of like to have one, and sure don't need another 22.
I can see where they would make a great trapping gun.

JeffinNZ
01-27-2014, 05:28 PM
I bought one here a few months back for about USD80.00 complete with a Weaver 2.5 scope. Near got whiplash getting my wallet out. I would have paid that just for the scope. I sure is a neat little rifle.

Bad Water Bill
01-27-2014, 05:33 PM
I do not know about you but the females in your family will have to draw straws to see who uses it first.

With the young ones, only one in the tube at a time just to be safe.

jcwit
01-27-2014, 05:39 PM
WARNING Plastic stocks shatter in the Alazka kold.

Better ship it to me for exercise and safe storage.:bigsmyl2:

Nice thought Bill, but I bet it's colder here in the Mid-West than in Alaska.

Bad Water Bill
01-27-2014, 05:43 PM
SHUUUSH:bigsmyl2:

mikeym1a
01-27-2014, 05:51 PM
Learn something new every day. When I was about 13-14, my best friend had a gun called the 'Nylon 66', it was a tube fed semi-auto, with a streamlined black plastic stock with a white diamond in the forearm. I thought it a pretty gun. We had us a contest as to who could hit the tin can at 75yds most often. I had a 10rd mag in my Targeteer, and he just put in 10 rounds in his '66. when the smoke cleared, I had put one more shot through my tin can then he did. His was faster, mine was better. That Targeteer was a really accurate gun. :-D

Bill*
01-27-2014, 06:35 PM
I believe the one I have (brown stock w/ white diamonds and a 10 rd magazine feed rather than tube feed) is actually marked "Mohawk 10C" but I've been told it's still a Rem.66. Anybody know if that's true?
Oh yeah... I've still got my 1974 or 5 (don't remember exactly) receipt for 49.95 from Kmart!

Menner
01-27-2014, 07:14 PM
I've got a black and chrome one that was my Grandfathers and I don't know about the not that accurate I saw in a post I put a 4x scope on it and many a squirrel hit the pot because of that little semi action.

jcwit
01-27-2014, 07:28 PM
Here's where you can find out just about anything you might want to know about the Remington Nylon rifles

http://www.nylonrifles.com/forums/viewforum.php?f=4

bearcove
01-27-2014, 07:48 PM
It is a nostalgia thing.

I laughed a big belly laugh when I saw one at the local GS for $269 Have one at the lake my uncle left us Brown stock white diamond blk forend cap coloring. What color they made the plastic should matter.???

Plinker for kids is all it is, but with RF ammo going silly might cash it in and buy a nice 22 Hornet

10x
01-27-2014, 07:54 PM
Just cause they ask high prices does not mean tthey sell. He probally took most of them home.

At those prices all he has to sell is one...

snuffy
01-27-2014, 08:04 PM
That sounds like mine, but it says "77" on it. I was told the 66s are tube feed, the ones with a magazine are later models. I don't know that it's a fact. Anyone know either way?

According to this, I have a M-77.;

http://www.chuckhawks.com/rem_nylon_rifles.htm

No model # on the rifle itself, the magazine has a 77 on it. Chuck Hawks says they were only in production for 2 years as the nylon 77. But then they were re-designated the Mohawk 10-C. Somewhere in my foggy memory, I remember buying it as a Mohawk.

The rear sight is missing, so I might hang a cheap 22 scope on it, walk it around the next gunshow.

rockrat
01-27-2014, 08:10 PM
I have one of the apache black/chrome guns. Had it for decades. Picked up a brown one a couple years ago at a garage sale for $100. It shoots better than some of my centerfire guns, but not as well as my Marlin 39a

xs11jack
01-27-2014, 08:17 PM
I bought mine in Gasp, Calicommy in the early 80s. Got it at K-mart for $80 new. It is a 77 with a green stock and 10 round mag. I love it, and it is very accurate, I use it a lot to teach kids to shoot. They like the light weight and the funny colored stock.
Ole Jack

shooterg
01-27-2014, 09:11 PM
Saw a nice one in LGS this week. $400 asking !

wgr
01-27-2014, 11:10 PM
The Remington Model 76 was the lever action version, if I remember correctly they were only made for a few years.

Roy
yes and the only lever gun ever made buy rem.

fouronesix
01-28-2014, 12:46 AM
Had a Nylon 66 (Apache model?) about 25-30 years ago. IIRC, paid about 75.00 for it. Don't even know why I bought it. Nothing great about the accuracy. Hollow noisy "plastic" stock that might look appropriate on a cheap BB gun. Seems like they were made to appeal to young teenagers- gaudy shiny things, IMO. Sold it a year later for about what I paid. Nothing seemed remarkable about it. Can't believe the prices begin quoted now!!! To each their own I guess.

bobthenailer
01-28-2014, 07:53 AM
I only ever shot one in the mid 1970s never really impressed me ! I have a friend who has a 66 chambered only in 22 short , they are also very rare.