Yes, I really hosed that up, I’ll fix it. ThanksI hate to be the one to tell ya, but that looks like a Marlin 336.
Maybe he was meaning a 30-30 Winchester caliber.
Thank you.That's a very nice shape 336 made when Marlin was Marlin, likely New Haven Conn. made, all major components machined forgings, should have the JM(John Marlin) proof stamp on barrel, and prices have risen considerable on those since the name passed thru Remington and now Ruger hands. You can watch gunbroker listings to see what folk are now paying for similar condition guns.
Not sure “why” there is a resurgence or if the perceived interest in them has ever dropped. But they are kind of cool. Like a single action revolver that makes one grin when that hammer is thumbed back, the lever gun is much the same type of grin when that lever is worked.What is the source of the lever gun resurgence? I've always had a few around and appreciated them, but I don't get the current hype for them. People just bored with ARs or what?
Cowboy action shooting, a string of highly successful westerns in last 20-30yrs, Winchester ceasing making even its post-64 actioned guns stateside, and Marlin who had made guns in CT since the late 1800s essentially unchanged past a square bolt going to round in the 1930s being bought and destroyed by a conglomerate who also destroyed Remington and numerous other companies....Ruger can bring out a fine version, but it will have modern manufacturing methods and will never be a CT built Marlin. All that combined on a quality firearm, and interest is going to be there, enough to keep older guns selling for around inflated price new ones.What is the source of the lever gun resurgence? I've always had a few around and appreciated them, but I don't get the current hype for them. People just bored with ARs or what?
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