Remington Model 37 Serial Numbers

  1. Remington Model 37 Serial Number Research
  2. Remington Model 37 Serial Numbers
  3. Ithaca Shotguns Model 37 Serial Numbers
  • The Remington Model 37 was their top-notch smallbore target rifle from 1937 til 1954, then replaced by the 40X. There should be two or three letters on the left side of the barrel right in front of the action that code the production date.
  • Remington Model 700, Model 700, Remington Model 700 serial numbers, owners manual, bolt action, ADL, BDL, CDL, P, SPS, values. Remington Model 700 Serial Number Lookup: Remington Firearms manufactured after 1921 have a code located on the.


Remington Model 37 Serial Numbers


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Call Remington and give them the serial number, they will tell you when it was born, however keep in mind they due make errors. Back up what they tell you with this information; DECODING REMINGTON SERIAL NUMBERS Model 870 LETTER PREFIX 1950 TO APPROX 1968: NO SERIAL NUMBER PREFIX 1968 TO PRESENT: LETTERS USED (IN SEQUENCE).


Remington Dates of
Manufacture

The following serial number
information is for
Remingtion firearms
manufactured after 1921

Remingtons manufactured after 1921
have a code located on the left side of the barrel
near the frame that identifies the year and month of
manufacture. The following letters correspond to the
months of the year, for example B=January, L= February
and so on:

B – L – A – C
– K – P – O – W – D – E – R – X

Barrel Code Location Diagram
Click this ^ (print page)
Don’t try to read this ->
It’s just a thumb image

view full image

Serial Numbers by date (factory record book)

A few other serial lists…

B – JanL – FebA – MarC – AprK – MayP – Jun
O – JulW – AugD – SepE – OctR – NovX – Dec
M – 1921N – 1922P – 1923R – 1924S – 1925
T – 1926U – 1927W – 1928X – 1929Y – 1930
Z – 1931A – 1932B – 1933C – 1934D – 1935
E – 1936F – 1937G – 1938H – 1939J – 1940
K – 1941L – 1942MM – 1943NN – 1944PP – 1945
RR – 1946SS – 1947TT – 1948UU – 1949WW – 1950
XX – 1951YY – 1952ZZ – 1953A – 1954B – 1955
C – 1956D – 1957E – 1958F – 1959G – 1960
H – 1961J – 1962K – 1963L – 1964M – 1965
N – 1966P – 1967R – 1968S – 1969T – 1970
U – 1971W – 1972X – 1973Y – 1974Z – 1975
I – 1976O – 1977Q – 1978V – 1979A – 1980
B – 1981C – 1982D – 1983E – 1984F – 1985
G – 1986H – 1987I – 1988J – 1989K – 1990
L – 1991M – 1992N – 1993O – 1994P – 1995
Q – 1996R – 1997S – 1998T – 1999 (*)U – 2000 (*)
V – 2001 (*)W – 2002X – 2003Y – 2004Z – 2005
A – 2006B – 2007C – 2008D – 2009E – 2010
F – 2011G – 2012

Remington Model 37 Serial Number Research

Using barrel codes (such as those listed above) to date the manufacture are reliable on Remington rifles, as the company rarely changed barrels on a customer’s rifle.

Using these barrel codes to date a shotgun is somewhat unreliable, as shotgun barrels are often interchanged at random. One needs to be sure that the barrel is original to the gun before trusting the Barrel Code listing, above.

Remington Model 37 Serial Numbers

(*)
On 8/9/99, stopped stamping the barrels with the date code.
They continued to mark the date code on the end flap of the shipping box.
They resumed stamping the date code on the barrel on 10/1/01.

05-27-2006, 03:09 AM

Ithaca Shotguns Model 37 Serial Numbers

...............A couple weeks ago the Burrito Match was again a battle of scoped 22RF's off the bench. There was 5 of us and only me and Larry were shooting sporters. I had my M582 Rem with a $69 blister packed Bushnell 3-9 and Larry was shooting a newly aquired Win M72 with an old Weaver 4X.
Us 2 lowlifes were competeing against 2 Win M52 match rifles and the Remington M37, which is also a match type and is a rifle I've lusted after for several years. The scopes on those 3 rifles were a Leupold, Lyman Super Targ-Spot, and a Unertl.
The winner (one of the M52's) shot a 100-8X with some RWS ammo of some type. The other M52 was 2nd, I came in 3rd with a not too shabby 100-3X, the other sporter was 4th and poor old Glen with his magnificent M37/ Lyman was last with a 95.
The whole reason for the story is that Glen was a bit upset and couldn't figure out his problem. I suspect he felt it might need to be cleaned as he called from his bench:
'Hey, Rick. How do you take the bolt out of this Remington?'
My reply was:
'I don't know, but if I owned it I probably would.'
He was lauging when he asked what was I trying to say :-). I don't know if he ever got it out or not. However this past Tuesday he had the Remington with him. Due to various reasons it was only Glen and I there (we were supposed to shoot centerfire pistols). Since we didn't have a match I just got in some practice and shot the S&W M&P in 38 S&W for fun.
Glen was complaining about the accuracy again from the Remington and said he'd cleaned it really well. I asked him what he was using and he said Federal Lightenings. Now someone may get good accuracy from them but I never had so I suggested they might be his problem. And to put a point to it, they obviously weren't working.
In my rangebox I always have a brick of Win Dynapoints and my MkII Ruger, so I suggested he try some of those. Neither of us had any other RF ammo so what the heck? I handed him the box and continued my messing around. In a bit he turned from his rifle and sai to come look at this 5 shot group. I looked through his spotting scope and in the X ring was a 5 shot group with 4 rounds in a tiny hole maybe a bit smaller then a pea with one just out for maybe 3/8' total.
Not bad for $9.63/brick stuff, eh?
He said, here you sit down and shoot 5 (we were at 50 meters). I was kind of nervous as the Lyman 24X really shows up your heartbeat. The crosshairs have a tiny dot at their intersection that just fit inside the X ring. The trigger is such that yuo can feel it against your finger and when you think, 'That looks good' it goes off. So I did my striving best to put 5 into the X ring.
And so I did. I managed to put one betwen his group and the flyer and I just clipped the bottom of his group with 2 more and the other 2 went through the existing hole. Altogether I suspect the group now was a scant half inch. All 10 rounds were well within the 5/8' X ring. Glen took a look and was pretty happy. To have 2 different people fire 10 rounds of bulk 22RF ammo into such a tight group is pretty nifty.
I gave him the rest of that brick of ammo. It increased my desire for the Remington and re-inforced my liking for Winchester Dyna-Points. I have one un-tapped case and maybe another 6-8 bricks comprising 3 lots, so who's to say what they might do? I sure don't see it getting much better! Of course my Rem 582 won't do that, but it does do a very satisfactory job none the less.
..................Buckshot