
Land, Sea and Air Pack (Ultimate Edition Bonus) Reach season level 50 in Season Zero (Pre-Season)īundle Nuclear Distillery Mastercraft Bundle When upgraded via Pack-a-Punch Machine it becomes the Orion 777, gaining increased damage, reserve ammo, fire rate and magazine size.Ĭall of Duty newsletter e-mails promotionīundle Tracer Pack: Corrupted Enigma Ultra Skinīundle Tracer Pack: Bulldozer Operator Bundleīundle Nuketown Weapon Bundle (Players who have purchased Call of Duty: Black Ops Cold War and log in before December 3, 2020) Within Die Maschine, It can be found in the "Living Room", across from the Ammo Cache a Wall Gun costing 1,000 Essence coming with 3 attachments and at Uncommon Rarity. The Hauer 77 can be brought into any map via Create-A-Class, at Loadout rarity and can be found at any rarity via the Mystery Box for 950 Essence. Another Hauer 77 variant, the Firestarter, can be found in the mission End Of The Line, and shoots incendiary shells that set enemies on fire. If Lazar is rescued in Havana, he will wield the shotgun in " Ashes to Ashes". Bell is given a Hauer 77 in " Break on Through" when going through the tunnel with Viet Cong and Spetsnaz soldiers.
ITHACA MODEL 49 MAGAZINE TUBE ARCHIVE
In " Desperate Measures", Russell Adler and Dimitri Belikov use the Hauer 77 when escaping from the archive bunker. The Hauer 77 is used through the campaign by Spetsnaz and Soviet Armed Forces soldiers, and is the secondary weapon in " Operation Chaos" and " The Final Countdown". The Ithaca Model 37 returns in Call of Duty: Black Ops Cold War as the Hauer 77. Hand loaded with moderate rechamber speed." - In-game description High damage with a possible 1-shot kill in close quarters. A search over there should bring up some more info.Sh_t9pump (Warzone) " Pump-action shotgun. I've only seen a picture of one, which was posted on. Personally I'd just leave it as it is and accept the limitations.īTW, there was a 49R (repeater) built for a few years, but it's a different action than the 72. I'm not sure mounting a scope would be practical, unless you maybe went with a forward mount on the barrel, because of the top loading/ejection. This one has a S/N which not all 22's had before the GCA-68, which probably means it's a post '68 model. I know they were made from the early 60's to the mid 70's or so. I've been unable to find any source of information on them. It's one of those guns my kids will find one day and wonder "Why'd he get this one?" but then they've never been a 12 year old country kid, raised on "Gunsmoke" and "The Rifleman" making a trip to Sears. I've only fired a few rounds through it, but it shot just fine at targets of opportunity. It looked pretty much like brand new to me, so it followed me home. Until last year, I spotted a 49 on the rack at my favorite store. By the time I got old enough and had the money to buy a rifle on my own, other things than a plain ol' single shot had my attention. My mother thought a rifle would kill people on the other side of the county if you fired it straight into the ground. I had an Ithaca M-66 single-shot, drop lever, 20 ga shotgun, and thought the 22 rifle was perfect to go with it. I wanted one for a long time, since I was a just a kid staring at them on the rack at Sears. The TW's didn't have the fake magazine tube I've been told. They were also sold by Sears under the "Ted Williams" brand. The 49 is, as mentioned above a single shot, martini style action. The Ithaca 72 went on to become the Henry. Click to expand.I don't believe that's correct.
