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New Marlin 336- 35 Remington
New Marlin 336- 35 Remington
Today was the first day at the range with my new-to-me Marlin 336 in 35 Remington. It's a 1970 Centennial model. Seems to be a shooter so far.
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- Deadwood Dutch
- Cowboy
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Re: New Marlin 336- 35 Remington
Beautiful rifle and a great caliber with the JM stamp. Congratulations!
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U.S. Navy 1965-1969 - NRA Member - Henry H004, Henry H001
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- Cowboy
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Re: New Marlin 336- 35 Remington
Very nice Marlin in a great caliber. 1970 100th anniversary of Marlin fire arms. One time a couple years back at Cabella's in Hamburg, Pa. there were four Century's on the used rack. Two 30/30 and two 35 Remington. I left there with out any of them.
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Re: New Marlin 336- 35 Remington
The other day at Cabela's near me they had a really nice 30-30 Centennial. I might "need" one to go with the 35.bandit1250 wrote:Very nice Marlin in a great caliber. 1970 100th anniversary of Marlin fire arms. One time a couple years back at Cabella's in Hamburg, Pa. there were four Century's on the used rack. Two 30/30 and two 35 Remington. I left there with out any of them.
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- JEBar
- Town Marshal / Deputy Admin
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Re: New Marlin 336- 35 Remington
if it shoots anywhere near as nice as it looks, its a Keeper .... looking forward to your range reports
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Re: New Marlin 336- 35 Remington
That's a beauty ditto. I've got it's twin in 30-30. 1970 model with medallion in the stock. Only change I've made to mine was installing TruGlo fiber optic sights. They really improved the sights visibility without ruining the classic look of the rifle. They do however require removal of the front sight hood so the rod can gather light properly.
If you shoot cast boolits, watch your speed. My microgroove rifling (different cal. obviously) likes to strip the bullet and lead terribly if pushed much past 1,600 fps. Under 1,600 fps or with jacketed, the 336 is a real delight.
EDIT: I see yours wears peep sights. Nice looking setup and longer sight radius. You've got a winner there.
If you shoot cast boolits, watch your speed. My microgroove rifling (different cal. obviously) likes to strip the bullet and lead terribly if pushed much past 1,600 fps. Under 1,600 fps or with jacketed, the 336 is a real delight.
EDIT: I see yours wears peep sights. Nice looking setup and longer sight radius. You've got a winner there.
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Re: New Marlin 336- 35 Remington
I shot a bunch of steel at 100 yards. Was able to hit the smallest ones (about 4-6 inches) by holding at 6 o'clock on them. I'm not much for shooting groups, but I did shoot one at 50 yards just to confirm that the sights were on.JEBar wrote:if it shoots anywhere near as nice as it looks, its a Keeper .... looking forward to your range reports
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- Cowboy
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Re: New Marlin 336- 35 Remington
Does it have XS sights on it. They are fast sights for deer and bear in the thick woods. If it will feed the shorter overall length cartridges they are fun to shoot hand loaded with jacketed 357 pistol bullets. Some won't feed the shorter length ammo. My SC is not 100% on feeding them but I still shoot it for practice. They can be pushed at higher speeds than the cast and not have leading issues if you stay with JSP or JHP bullets. I load my nephew 180 Hornady's in his 35 for deer and they drop them with no problem. His is very accurate with that bullet and a full load of 3031. You picked up a real fine Marlin with that one. Have fun with it.
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Re: New Marlin 336- 35 Remington
Yes, it has the XS sights. They work really well. My Henry 30-30 has them, too, so I already had experience with them.
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- Cattle Driver
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Re: New Marlin 336- 35 Remington
Sweet looking rifle, ditto. Congratulations.
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Henry Frontier .22LR