The rifleman as seen on the old TV series used a Winchester model 1892 rifle,or a reproduction of that rifle.
The Rifleman - 1958 Mark's Rifle 5-8 was released on: USA: 19 November 1962
745 Rifleman 746 Rifleman, Auto (BAR - Browning Automatic Rifle)
>The Rifleman's Rifle was a modified Winchester 1892 .he was called Spike Kingfisher
A non-firing replica of Lucas McCain's Winchester 1892 can be found at the website for gunsofold. They are rather pricey- around $200.
4 people: -Grendadier -Heavy Gunner -Rifleman -Fire Team Leader
It has happened. During the American Civil War, a Union rifleman fired his rifle, and the projectile collided with the projectile fired by a Confederate rifleman - in the barrel of the Confederate's rifle. IIRC, that rifle was displayed in the Museum of American History.
Nope
The Rifleman - 1958 The Executioner - 4.32 was released on: USA: 7 May 1962
I assume you are asking what is a "Rifleman" versus "Uh, what is a rifle, man?" The short answer is that a Rifleman is a man who wields a rifle. The somewhat longer answer... Rifleman is a largely military term, and is still used today. An example is the US Marine mantra that "Every marine is a rifleman." That is, every US Marine has been trained to use a rifle regardless of what is actual job is. Despite what the media has likely portrayed to you, and what historical narcissists who enjoy fetishizing ancient weapons such as swords often think; using a rifle is a specific skill set. Sure anyone can pick up a gun and shoot someone, but so too can anyone pick up a sharp instrument and stab someone. There is a huge difference in being able to physically use a rifle, being proficient in the use of a rifle, and mastering a rifle. That is the difference between a man with a rifle, and a rifleman. A Rifleman is a soldier who has trained to proficiency in the use of his rifle. He knows how to provide basic maintenance for his rifle. More importantly, has at least a working knowledge of how to account for effects such as windage and ballistic drop which are key in providing the accuracy at distance which makes rifles superior to handguns. Depending on the organization and/or individual he may have additional training such as how to use a bayonet; or to provide fire at longer than typical ranges. Prior to the Rifleman there was the Musketeer, a soldier wielding the rifle's forebearer known as the musket. Before the Musketeer was the Pikeman, who as his name implies wielded a pike.
Rifleman - basically, your bog-standard infantry
Very accurate rifle. it is a copy of the winchester model 70''the rifleman's rifle'', but made at a cheaper price. Its a post 1960's rifle.