Marlin 1894C in .357 Mag
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Re: Marlin 1894C in .357 Mag
I have one, and LOVE it. It's a pain in the butt to load, but pretty dang accurate. Mine was made in the mid 80's. It was given to me by my step-dad over a year ago - he only fired about 12 rounds through it. He probably thought it was too hard to load, and put it away in the gun safe. Small, light, barely any recoil - great rifle.
Do you have a hard time loading yours?
Do you have a hard time loading yours?
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Re: Marlin 1894C in .357 Mag
I would call it more versatile than the 44 mag version I have. The 38 special/357 cartridge is a lot easier to handle in a companion pistol than a 44 pistol. Get a Ruger Vaquero in 357, they are a blast to shoot. Also, the ammo is cheaper and easy to reload.
Re: Marlin 1894C in .357 Mag
Mine is not easy to load either. I wish they made the loading gate a little bigger. Still, that's the only gripe I have for it.
Re: Marlin 1894C in .357 Mag
I love mine, My grandfather left it to me when he passed. That is one that will never leave me as long as I'm alive and kicking!
Re: Marlin 1894C in .357 Mag
so, what is so difficult about loading these?
I've been seriously considering a .357 lever for a while. Probably will be my next long(ish..) gun since I have a half dozen .38/.357 wheelies.
Overall review & opinions on the marlin?
I've been seriously considering a .357 lever for a while. Probably will be my next long(ish..) gun since I have a half dozen .38/.357 wheelies.
Overall review & opinions on the marlin?
Morgan
CHL, TSRA, NRA-LIFETIME
CHL, TSRA, NRA-LIFETIME
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Re: Marlin 1894C in .357 Mag
I have a Marlin 1894 .357 that I got for Cowboy Action Shooting some years ago. It shoots light "cowboy" loads (5.0 - 6.5 grains Unique, 158g lead RNFP) very accurately, but the microgroove rifling is not great with full-power lead bullets and I have not tried gas-checks. Full-power jacketed bullets, from 125 g to 158 g, group cloverleafs at 100 yd prone with a tang sight. I think Marlin produced them with Ballard rifling too - would have no problem with cast bullets at higher velocity.
It is a great little carbine. It is fun, accurate, and useful. The only "problem" with loading it is that the loading gate spring is strong and you have to insert the next round at the right angle hold the gate open and to push the previous round up the tube magazine - and this is not a real problem, it just takes practice and it is slower than swapping out a box magazine like on an AR-15.
If you find one and buy it, I think you will be very pleased.
Regards,
Andrew
It is a great little carbine. It is fun, accurate, and useful. The only "problem" with loading it is that the loading gate spring is strong and you have to insert the next round at the right angle hold the gate open and to push the previous round up the tube magazine - and this is not a real problem, it just takes practice and it is slower than swapping out a box magazine like on an AR-15.
If you find one and buy it, I think you will be very pleased.
Regards,
Andrew
Retractable claws; the *original* concealed carry
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Re: Marlin 1894C in .357 Mag
Actually the .44Mag can shoots .44Mag, .44SPL and if you have a .44Mag wheelgun, it can shoot the sameTallinthesaddle wrote:I would call it more versatile than the 44 mag version I have. The 38 special/357 cartridge is a lot easier to handle in a companion pistol than a 44 pistol. Get a Ruger Vaquero in 357, they are a blast to shoot. Also, the ammo is cheaper and easy to reload.
Those wheelgun/leveraction combos are very very very versatile...and believe it or not the .357 and .44 Mag really don't "come alive" till they come out of a longer barrel.
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Re: Marlin 1894C in .357 Mag
just finding one is proving hard!
It is a cliche that most cliches are true, but then like most cliches, that cliche is untrue.
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Re: Marlin 1894C in .357 Mag
..because nobody who has one wants to let it go, and anyone who used to have one is looking for one to replace the one that got away. They're out there, just takes patience.
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Re: Marlin 1894C in .357 Mag
I've got one. It's a great little rifle. Mine is pre-safety also.
I am scared of empty guns and keep mine loaded at all times. The family knows the guns are loaded and treats them with respect. Loaded guns cause few accidents; empty guns kill people every year. -Elmer Keith. 1961
Re: Marlin 1894C in .357 Mag
finally found one! Out of state purchase so it is winging it's way to me as we speak. Found a guy that does $6 ffl transfers in Pfulgerville! Took me about 3 days of hard searching to find that little gun!
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Re: Marlin 1894C in .357 Mag
When I took Urban Rifle at Thunder Ranch, there was a couple from Chicago that were using these guns. (They wanted to use something they could legally have at home.) We fired between 1200 and 2000 rds in that week long course and by Tuesday, they both had their fingers covered in white medical tape. I don't know how they did it.
Chas.
Chas.
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Re: Marlin 1894C in .357 Mag
The cowboy shooters sometimes wrap the lever loop with rawhide strip, to cushion the fingers when you open the lever. There is a way to wrap it so the ends of the strip don't show - they are covered by the wrapping.
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Re: Marlin 1894C in .357 Mag
They used tape on their fingers (thumb and index finger) because they were getting torn up loading!BobCat wrote:The cowboy shooters sometimes wrap the lever loop with rawhide strip, to cushion the fingers when you open the lever. There is a way to wrap it so the ends of the strip don't show - they are covered by the wrapping.
Chas.