I've owned a Winchester Model 94 in 32 Special for something over 10 years, kind of a unique little carbine in production for about 5 years from the late 70's until USRA took over production. According to Blue Book there were 7984 of them produced in 32 and 38-55. They are a standard top eject 16" barreled carbine labeled "Wrangler". Laser engraved receiver, nicely fitted, saddle ring, hoop lever, semi buck horn sights. I never did much with it, changed the rear sight to a Williams 5D that I had on hand; that doubled the sight radius, blanked the rear dovetail. I put a couple hundred rounds of hand loads thru it using Hornady and Speer 170 gr. soft points. It was OK, but kicked pretty hard, being short and light. I cleaned it up and left it alone for a few years. About 5 years ago I stopped in Missoula and talked to Jon Vivas at Western Bullet Co. He had several boxes of a .321 boolit from an NEI 150 gr. FP mold I bought a few boxes and started searching for data. Found a recipe for SR4759, loaded a few, fired them, pretty good at short range. Went home loaded 50 rounds and never got back to the gun until last Sunday afternoon. I was invited to a private range on a big farm out on the prairie. I took the little rifle, there were gongs set up at various known ranges and it was"have at them but make sure you have your muzzle past the line when loaded", actually it was a rope strung out on the ground. I observed for a while, everyone was very conscientious about safety so I pulled out the little rifle and gave it a try. 200 yard gong, it was dead!!!!!! over and over. I can't believe it worked as well as it did. Had to adjust the rear sight up or hold over, but I was very surprised, I let a couple of others try it and they were dumbfounded. There was one other guy shooting cast in a 1891 vintage "86 Winchester 40-65 carbine. We had a lot of fun showing the modern shooters what we could do with the old, obsolete, slow, dirty, nasty lead bullets. I'm going to spend more time with the little '94 this fall. Good day and fun was had by all. Oh, I traded the hoop lever away years ago for almost 3 times what a standard lever cost me from Brownells.