Savage / Stevens model 94
94B, 94C, 94BT, 107B,107C, 107BT
12, 16. 20, 28, gauge & 410

 

 

The illustration shown below was scanned off a Savage factory parts list, using factory reference numbers, which are converted to factory part numbers.  This is important as about all obsolete parts suppliers use ONLY factory or closely associated numbers where ever possible so everyone is on the same page.

 

Note, for some of the older firearms, many over 100 years old, the factories never used what we now know as assembly drawings, but just views of many of the component parts & possibly randomly placed
 as seen below

 

 

 

The parts listed below are for your identification purposes only. 
The author of this website DOES NOT have any parts.


nekoken 3d egress

 

The illustrated parts shown here, are from original factory parts list of about 1950 & use factory party numbers

 

 

Nekoken 3d Egress Access

| Metric | Baseline | Nekoken 3D Egress | Improvement | |----------------------------|----------|--------------------|--------------| | First-frame latency | 2.3 sec | 0.4 sec | 5.75x | | Steady-state bandwidth | 120 Mbps | 22 Mbps | 5.45x | | Server-side CPU (egress) | 35% | 12% | 2.9x | | Client visual quality (MS-SSIM) | 0.92 | 0.89 (with predictive fallback) | acceptable |

// Client side (browser) const dc = peerConnection.createDataChannel('geometry-egress'); dc.onmessage = (event) => const delta = decodeMeshDelta(event.data); applyToScene(delta); ; nekoken 3d egress

;

| Attribute | 2D Egress | 3D Spatial Egress (Nekoken) | |-----------|-----------|-------------------------------| | | KB–MB/s | 10–100 MB/s (point clouds, meshes, textures) | | Latency sensitivity | 100ms+ tolerable | <10ms for motion-to-photon | | State management | Stateless or session cookies | Heavy state (entire scene graph, physics, occlusion culling) | | Security model | Block at proxy | Must inspect within geometry (e.g., PII embedded in texture maps) | | Metric | Baseline | Nekoken 3D Egress

 

Note that extractors for guns made prior to 1950 were .435 wide at the top, while the later ones were .308.

C

opyright © 2005 - 2020  LeeRoy Wisner  with credit given for original illustrations.  All Rights Reserved

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Originated 11-03-2005  Last updated 11-08-2020


 


 

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