Marlin 336 44 Mag
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Marlin 336 44 Mag
This has probably been discussed before but I just found one of these rifles. It seems to me that it is a favored model due to the round bolt design. Could all you folks remind me why I should pick this rifle up instead of a 1894 in 44 Mag.
Thanks Ron
Thanks Ron
everybody wants to be a cowboy but, nobody wants to ride the range
You should pick one up because it didn't have a long production. The .44 Mag was discovered to be (or PROVEN to be) too short for the action. If you want performance above all else, the 1894 is the way to go. Yes, many (most?) 336 .44 Mags do well, so do most Winchester 1894 .44 Mags but they weren't designed for cartridges this short. IME it is better to just stick with the proven commodity.
Sincerely,
Hobie
"We are all travelers in the wilderness of this world, and the best that we find in our travels is an honest friend." Robert Louis Stevenson
Hobie
"We are all travelers in the wilderness of this world, and the best that we find in our travels is an honest friend." Robert Louis Stevenson
I'd pass on this one. It has design flaws which Marlin corrected it by dropping this chambering.
I'm no fan of the Marlin 1894 for shooting heavyweights or 44 Special loads. The 1 - 38 rifling is less-than-ideal for these applications.

I sold my litle Marlin and bought this plain looking but great shooting Ruger. Accurasy is amazing with any 44 MAG load!
TR
I'm no fan of the Marlin 1894 for shooting heavyweights or 44 Special loads. The 1 - 38 rifling is less-than-ideal for these applications.

I sold my litle Marlin and bought this plain looking but great shooting Ruger. Accurasy is amazing with any 44 MAG load!
TR
Fire Up the Grill - Hunting is NOT Catch & Release!
To a Marlin collector the 44 Mag 336 is a low-production-volume variant of interest, and IMO if you fit that bill and have the $$$, it's worth acquiring.
I had one for a while back in the early 80s. It was finicky about feeding some cartridges, and the problems seemed to be a function of OAL and bullet nose profile. I learned to "finesse" the lever just right, then lost interest in the 44 Magnum in general. The 336 and a companion 4" M29 S&W both got sold for a Colt 1911 acquisition.
Noah
I had one for a while back in the early 80s. It was finicky about feeding some cartridges, and the problems seemed to be a function of OAL and bullet nose profile. I learned to "finesse" the lever just right, then lost interest in the 44 Magnum in general. The 336 and a companion 4" M29 S&W both got sold for a Colt 1911 acquisition.
Noah
Might as well face it, you're addicted to guns . . .
Hope they shoot OK, as I picked up a saddle ring rifle that was in decent shape. I then found a near new one with the Marlin sticker still on the forend. Thought about converting the older one to 445 super mag, but hate to ruin a collector gun.
The meek shall inherit the earth, but I reserve the mineral rights!
All the knowledge in the world, is of no use to fools! (Eagles-long road out of Eden)
All the knowledge in the world, is of no use to fools! (Eagles-long road out of Eden)
Marlin 336
Thank you all for your advice. I believe I will pass on this rifle
Gunbroker #98839975
Thanks Ron
Gunbroker #98839975
Thanks Ron
everybody wants to be a cowboy but, nobody wants to ride the range