First - a pretty good barrel ding. Oh well, cosmetic, and not functional, and I don't plan on re-selling this gun, so I don't really care.

Second - two small wood dings. Kind of the same as above. If it is going to be my 'utility' .357 carbine, who cares - my OWN 'dings' will soon outnumber those from the factory. Still - kind of tacky.

Third - wood-to-metal fit is pretty marginal. Something that if I were doing it myself I guess I'd be 'happy' with, but more because it was the first effort at stock-fitting, and not because it fits WELL. Of course this is a problem on leverguns more than most, because you just can't conceal the fit the way you can on most bolt or semiauto guns. Again - cosmetic, but tacky.

Fourth - Bolt has the 'setback' that some Marlin 1894's seem to have, and I know it doesn't affect function, but it IS annoying - perhaps moreso than the other stuff, because it LOOKS like it might indicate a problem, or the action not fully closed. I have to say this is not as bad as some examples I've seen, and I know it is tricky on the stainless guns since the gap shows so clearly (I DO have other 1894's with gaps like this). The bolt's REAR end protrudes a bit too, though, and again - not a 'functional' issue, but tacky.


Fifth - the action is REALLY rough. Even dry-cycling, it stumbles and sticks. Thankfully, I know how to fix that

Now for the good news...

There were no metal shavings inside, as some have reported, and all the screws were intact, threaded properly, and so on.
Since the wood to metal fit is marginal, and it will be my 'utility' gun anyway, I decided to swap stocks with my old 1894c BLUED model, and see how they look...
Well, the old blued gun suddenly looks SUPERB with the new and low-gloss, darker wood on it, and everything fits just fine. Even the hole in the forend is drilled precisely right to exchange with this 1980's vintage gun. Cool.





Of course with the chipped-varnish, lighter color wood with MEGA-dings (it was my 'working gun' for a couple decades), the CSS doesn't look 'new' any longer, but the wood-to-metal fit is about the same, and since I plan on slimming and sanding and refinishing the stock, it won't matter. Besides, it already makes the CSS look like an actual 'working' gun that makes me forgive the other 'tacky' features. Here's a photo of the CSS with the wood from my OLD blued 1894c (soon to be a refinish project...).

Although I personally don't care about the things I'm reporting on above, because most are either only cosmetic and it isn't a gun I bought as a 'safe queen', or are things I can easily fix, I AM concerned that the fine gun company of Marlin needs to keep their reputation as a QUALITY gunmaker, and for the purchasers who are more critical than I am, I hope they bump up quality control a bit.
At least my Ruger Blackhawk seems to like its new companion...

Range report soon I hope...
