Q:
I have a Remington .22 rifle, and it has Remington Nylon 66 printed on the bottom of the stock. I have called and wrote Remington Arms for info on the gun, but to no avail. Can anybody give me any info on this gun. Is 66 the year it was made? How many were made, etc... Anything would be appreciated.
Question by wallofsam. Uploaded on March 31, 2009
Answers (13)
I wish I owned one, always thought they looked neat. Slightly over a million were made from 1959-1990.
i would think that it would be the year it was made
Nylon 66 is a type of DuPont thermoplastic (it melts). I believe the material name was just applied to the rifle.
I believe MLH is right, they are pretty sweet guns they made several different styles all in .22. Some have clips and some are tube fed. The only ones I've shot is one with a clip. In my opinion these rifles are one of the best .22 semi autos ever made, even better than a 10/22.
If you google search for "Remington nylon 66" a couple of links come up at wikianswers.com. A guy named John shows how to date the rifle and someone else goes over a bit on value. Searching on gunbroker.com will also give an idea of value (sometimes inflated).
You can even look back on this blog as several months ago, probably before Christmas, we had an in depth discussion on this particular rifle. Yes I wish I still had my brown one and my black one but in a weak moment let them go years ago. A strong case of guntrader's anxiety just hit me.
66 is the model number Remington assigned to it. There are other variants in the 66 variety including the 10C.
Those are great guns!!! One of my good friends owns one. He used this web site to get replacement parts and had good luck with them. www.e-gunparts.com
Here's a little article on the Remington Nylon 66 and the material it was made from, DuPont Zytel Nylon 101, a structural version of Nylon 66 (or as we sometimes wrote it 6/6 or 6-6) ...
http://www.americanrifleman.org/rifles_historical_Rem66.html
There's a few more references if you want to search for them. Make your own conclusions about where the name came from.
You win. This is a sweet, unstoppable gun. Don't let Petzal know. He'll try to steal it. He writes about them a lot, for a plastic auto .22.
MLH thanks for the link. I'm glad that I have held on to mine, my dad gave it to me so I'll never let it go. I have found out that it shoots better without a scope, haven't figured that one out yet but it is more accurite with one sights.
The Nylon 66 was introduced in 1959 and remained in production for 28 years. The Zytel stock was innovative, a departure from other autoloaders of the day. My brother bought one shortly after it appeared on the market, and it performed very reliably with .22LR ammunition. There were two variations I'd seen on the market: one in brown, another in black. I'm told there was a third (green) which I'd never seen, but I was admittedly busy and somewhat out of touch in the '60s. I've never disassembled this model, so I don't know anything about it internally. The Nylon 66 had a tubular magazine and fed from the buttstock. The Nylon 66 sold well, and they can still be found on the used market for approximately $150-175 or so, more if in excellent condition.
I have one with a 60 stamped on the bottom. Mine belonged to my grandfather. I was told he bought it in the late 60's, early 70's. I have been told that they are becoming a collector's item. I have no idea of the value though. Just for curiosity's sake I would like to know.
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I believe MLH is right, they are pretty sweet guns they made several different styles all in .22. Some have clips and some are tube fed. The only ones I've shot is one with a clip. In my opinion these rifles are one of the best .22 semi autos ever made, even better than a 10/22.
If you google search for "Remington nylon 66" a couple of links come up at wikianswers.com. A guy named John shows how to date the rifle and someone else goes over a bit on value. Searching on gunbroker.com will also give an idea of value (sometimes inflated).
You can even look back on this blog as several months ago, probably before Christmas, we had an in depth discussion on this particular rifle. Yes I wish I still had my brown one and my black one but in a weak moment let them go years ago. A strong case of guntrader's anxiety just hit me.
Those are great guns!!! One of my good friends owns one. He used this web site to get replacement parts and had good luck with them. www.e-gunparts.com
Here's a little article on the Remington Nylon 66 and the material it was made from, DuPont Zytel Nylon 101, a structural version of Nylon 66 (or as we sometimes wrote it 6/6 or 6-6) ...
http://www.americanrifleman.org/rifles_historical_Rem66.html
There's a few more references if you want to search for them. Make your own conclusions about where the name came from.
The Nylon 66 was introduced in 1959 and remained in production for 28 years. The Zytel stock was innovative, a departure from other autoloaders of the day. My brother bought one shortly after it appeared on the market, and it performed very reliably with .22LR ammunition. There were two variations I'd seen on the market: one in brown, another in black. I'm told there was a third (green) which I'd never seen, but I was admittedly busy and somewhat out of touch in the '60s. I've never disassembled this model, so I don't know anything about it internally. The Nylon 66 had a tubular magazine and fed from the buttstock. The Nylon 66 sold well, and they can still be found on the used market for approximately $150-175 or so, more if in excellent condition.
I wish I owned one, always thought they looked neat. Slightly over a million were made from 1959-1990.
66 is the model number Remington assigned to it. There are other variants in the 66 variety including the 10C.
You win. This is a sweet, unstoppable gun. Don't let Petzal know. He'll try to steal it. He writes about them a lot, for a plastic auto .22.
MLH thanks for the link. I'm glad that I have held on to mine, my dad gave it to me so I'll never let it go. I have found out that it shoots better without a scope, haven't figured that one out yet but it is more accurite with one sights.
I have one with a 60 stamped on the bottom. Mine belonged to my grandfather. I was told he bought it in the late 60's, early 70's. I have been told that they are becoming a collector's item. I have no idea of the value though. Just for curiosity's sake I would like to know.
Nylon 66 is a type of DuPont thermoplastic (it melts). I believe the material name was just applied to the rifle.
i would think that it would be the year it was made
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