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Posted: 11/5/2023 10:24:33 AM EDT
[Last Edit: triburst1]
The Marlin 336Y “Spikehorn” with 16.25” barrel and 12.75” LOP was my favorite configuration. Such a handy little carbine. I wonder if Ruger will bring it back?
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“It does not take a majority to prevail, but rather an irate, tireless minority keen on setting brush fires of freedom in the minds of men”
- Samuel Adams |
Let's hope. Those little buggers are incredibly handy and useful, especially with Skinner sights. I'd like to get another one to send off to JES for conversion to .375 Win.
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Hopefully with a straight grip.
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Call sign: Smack
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I wish I bought the youth guns years ago.
I am short and like a dummy I had a bit of a bias against them and preferred regular guns. Regular guns that I shot a lot, all summer long in a T shirt and did fine with them. Then come winter when the cold weather clothes came out I’d fumble a bit on mounting the longer stocks. I should have embraced Youth length a long time ago. Their downside is they always had the cheaper birch stocks, no checkering or pressed checkering. I am older now and have a few guns with McMillan stocks I ordered with shorter LOP. We may not see the lever guns other than .22s come in a Y size. They’re no longer $350 starter guns but now trendy boutique harder to find guns that cost over a $k. . Youth guns are now cheap plastic stocked economy bolt guns that even put a dent in the handyrifle break action sales. We can hope though. |
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Originally Posted By PigBat: Let's hope. Those little buggers are incredibly handy and useful, especially with Skinner sights. I'd like to get another one to send off to JES for conversion to .375 Win. View Quote RPP mo bettah! https://rangerpointstore.com/marlin-henry-rifle-peep-sights |
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I'm not Retired, I'm a Professional Grandpa!
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Originally Posted By Merlin: RPP mo bettah! https://rangerpointstore.com/marlin-henry-rifle-peep-sights https://cdn11.bigcommerce.com/s-kxlnizhy7c/images/stencil/1280x1280/products/275/1622/Cloverleaf_Peeps_brass_silver_black__86390.1630046517.jpg?c=2 View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Originally Posted By Merlin: Originally Posted By PigBat: Let's hope. Those little buggers are incredibly handy and useful, especially with Skinner sights. I'd like to get another one to send off to JES for conversion to .375 Win. RPP mo bettah! https://rangerpointstore.com/marlin-henry-rifle-peep-sights https://cdn11.bigcommerce.com/s-kxlnizhy7c/images/stencil/1280x1280/products/275/1622/Cloverleaf_Peeps_brass_silver_black__86390.1630046517.jpg?c=2 The cloverleaf is very intriguing. Any comments on its usefulness v. a standard aperture? |
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Originally Posted By PigBat: The cloverleaf is very intriguing. Any comments on its usefulness v. a standard aperture? View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Originally Posted By PigBat: Originally Posted By Merlin: Originally Posted By PigBat: Let's hope. Those little buggers are incredibly handy and useful, especially with Skinner sights. I'd like to get another one to send off to JES for conversion to .375 Win. RPP mo bettah! https://rangerpointstore.com/marlin-henry-rifle-peep-sights https://cdn11.bigcommerce.com/s-kxlnizhy7c/images/stencil/1280x1280/products/275/1622/Cloverleaf_Peeps_brass_silver_black__86390.1630046517.jpg?c=2 The cloverleaf is very intriguing. Any comments on its usefulness v. a standard aperture? |
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I'm not Retired, I'm a Professional Grandpa!
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Originally Posted By Kingstrider: The old JM Spikehorn models have checkered walnut stocks. Here are two, the gun on top was converted to straight stock. https://i.imgur.com/y9y2uF9h.jpg View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Originally Posted By Kingstrider: Originally Posted By SteelonSteel: I wish I bought the youth guns years ago. I am short and like a dummy I had a bit of a bias against them and preferred regular guns. Regular guns that I shot a lot, all summer long in a T shirt and did fine with them. Then come winter when the cold weather clothes came out I'd fumble a bit on mounting the longer stocks. I should have embraced Youth length a long time ago. Their downside is they always had the cheaper birch stocks, no checkering or pressed checkering. I am older now and have a few guns with McMillan stocks I ordered with shorter LOP. We may not see the lever guns other than .22s come in a Y size. They're no longer $350 starter guns but now trendy boutique harder to find guns that cost over a $k. . Youth guns are now cheap plastic stocked economy bolt guns that even put a dent in the handyrifle break action sales. We can hope though. The old JM Spikehorn models have checkered walnut stocks. Here are two, the gun on top was converted to straight stock. https://i.imgur.com/y9y2uF9h.jpg |
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I'm not Retired, I'm a Professional Grandpa!
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I’d be in for one, but I don’t want to spend more than $600-$700 on one. I think they are going to have to find a way to reduce costs on a few models, because when you can buy a kid a bolt action youth rifle with a nice scope for $1000, no one is going to buy a lever action with iron sights for similar money.
I bought an R92 .357 for an “always” rifle to pack around while bumming the backroads. I’d trade it for a 336Y in a heart beat. |
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From the days when all the gun rags touted the RRA DEA rifle as the greatest ever. Those were the days when Magpul made magpuls, Bushmaster was Tier 1, Eotechs and vertical grips were awesome!
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Originally Posted By WantsAnRRA: I’d be in for one, but I don’t want to spend more than $600-$700 on one. I think they are going to have to find a way to reduce costs on a few models, because when you can buy a kid a bolt action youth rifle with a nice scope for $1000, no one is going to buy a lever action with iron sights for similar money. I bought an R92 .357 for an “always” rifle to pack around while bumming the backroads. I’d trade it for a 336Y in a heart beat. View Quote Same here. Not paying $1200 for a rifle that was $400 new a decade ago and $900 used now. |
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“It does not take a majority to prevail, but rather an irate, tireless minority keen on setting brush fires of freedom in the minds of men”
- Samuel Adams |
I'd be in for one, kids would love it... As would I
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Originally Posted By PigBat: Let's hope. Those little buggers are incredibly handy and useful, especially with Skinner sights. I'd like to get another one to send off to JES for conversion to .375 Win. View Quote If you look far and wide on the used racks Marlin did make what I suspect were a very few 375WIN rifles. A old gentleman was trying to sell me his . This was a gun with a few years on it but he had only hunted very carefully with it. I refused his very good offers because there was no ammo or cases available for it. Couple of years ago Starline kicked out some so I jumped on it. They called it a Model 375 and mine has a 3/4 magazine with a 20" barrel |
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The new marlin/rugers I have seen have been beautiful guns , wouldn't expect Ruger is going to work very hard at creating a budget model , not the way they roll.
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Originally Posted By nhsport: If you look far and wide on the used racks Marlin did make what I suspect were a very few 375WIN rifles. A old gentleman was trying to sell me his . This was a gun with a few years on it but he had only hunted very carefully with it. I refused his very good offers because there was no ammo or cases available for it. Couple of years ago Starline kicked out some so I jumped on it. They called it a Model 375 and mine has a 3/4 magazine with a 20" barrel View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Originally Posted By nhsport: Originally Posted By PigBat: Let's hope. Those little buggers are incredibly handy and useful, especially with Skinner sights. I'd like to get another one to send off to JES for conversion to .375 Win. If you look far and wide on the used racks Marlin did make what I suspect were a very few 375WIN rifles. A old gentleman was trying to sell me his . This was a gun with a few years on it but he had only hunted very carefully with it. I refused his very good offers because there was no ammo or cases available for it. Couple of years ago Starline kicked out some so I jumped on it. They called it a Model 375 and mine has a 3/4 magazine with a 20" barrel I've got one of them in VG condition like yours, and I really like it. I also have a Winchester 94 Big Bore and a Ruger #3 in .375 Win. I like .375 Win That's why I want another 336Y: the Model 375 is just too nice to start chopping on it, and .30-30 is just too damn useful to convert the one I have. |
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Picked up a Marlin 1895 Trapper last night. Very impressed I bought my sons Marlin 1895 SBL 6 years ago. The quality of wood fitting and finish is better on this trapper.
I bought an 1895 Dark just before Marlin folded, biggest turd I had ever seen. Chamber looked like it had been cut with a cold chisel. I wound up getting a refund for it. |
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Originally Posted By WantsAnRRA: I’d be in for one, but I don’t want to spend more than $600-$700 on one. I think they are going to have to find a way to reduce costs on a few models, because when you can buy a kid a bolt action youth rifle with a nice scope for $1000, no one is going to buy a lever action with iron sights for similar money. I bought an R92 .357 for an “always” rifle to pack around while bumming the backroads. I’d trade it for a 336Y in a heart beat. View Quote It wouldn't surprise me if Ruger went to investment casting on the Marlins. |
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I am saddened by your plight. Allow me to offer my deepest and sincerest condolence. However, I do not have the Chaplain’s duty and I am short of towels. Please see the Captain of the Head for material for drying your eyes.
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Originally Posted By golfish: I believe they did/do... View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Originally Posted By golfish: Originally Posted By ElrodCod: It wouldn't surprise me if Ruger went to investment casting on the Marlins. I believe they did/do... The Ruger Marlins use forgings just like the originals did. |
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I am saddened by your plight. Allow me to offer my deepest and sincerest condolence. However, I do not have the Chaplain’s duty and I am short of towels. Please see the Captain of the Head for material for drying your eyes.
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I'd like to see them bring back the 336 XLR.
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I have a Marlin 336Y that has 1 round thru it. Bought it for my daughter but no interest in shooting it...Don't see many around as said...
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I have a Remlin 336Y. It came with the laminate stocks. I had to send it back because it would shoot 12”+ high at 100 yards with the rear sight bottomed out. Remlin sent me a new rifle back that did not have the laminate stocks (at least the rifle came back with useable sights/barrel/accuracy). I really wish I could find those laminate stocks.
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Originally Posted By PigBat: The cloverleaf is very intriguing. Any comments on its usefulness v. a standard aperture? View Quote Seems pretty gimmicky, your eye will fine the natural center of a rd aperture quickly. Why add something that won't help but possibly cause your eye to focus on the cloverleaf and not the front sight? If I read their description right, there is just a leaf spring that holds rear sight up, not a mechanical assembly. Between that and all alum construction, I'd take the more robust and better looking skinner sight. |
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Does anyone have one of the trapper Rossi .30-30s yet?
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Anti-gun, anti-freedom California legislator Leland Yee served FIVE YEARS for running machine guns and rocket launchers to gangs.
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The 336Y are $900-$1000 now ?
I was pissed when I had to pay $600 for one. |
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"Never argue with an idiot. They drag you down to their level, then beat you with experience."
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Hey fellas, can't you buy another butt stock or cut down one to shorten the LOP?
I'm with ya OP, I'd like to see Ruger bring back all models. |
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“It does not take a majority to prevail, but rather an irate, tireless minority keen on setting brush fires of freedom in the minds of men”
- Samuel Adams |
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I have a mint JM one and a Remlin that works fine.
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I ended up selling mine to a friend today. It was a Remington made with the matte black finish and a no grain at all stock. I replaced it with a beautiful JM 1894 .44 with no extra money out of pocket.
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"Never argue with an idiot. They drag you down to their level, then beat you with experience."
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Originally Posted By 9mmstephen: They announced it today: https://www.marlinfirearms.com/s/model_70906/ View Quote I paid $399 plus tax for my 336Y in 2019 at Academy Sports. About the only thing I don't like about it: Yep, the pistol grip. But it's the slickest Marlin/Remlin action I ever got out at least 5 rifles, so there's that. |
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I'm not Retired, I'm a Professional Grandpa!
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Originally Posted By 9mmstephen: They announced it today: https://www.marlinfirearms.com/s/model_70906/ View Quote Full sized stock. I'm pissed I didn't grab 4 when cdnn was blowing them out. |
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"If you cant do something smart, do something right"
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Originally Posted By 9mmstephen: They announced it today: https://www.marlinfirearms.com/s/model_70906/ View Quote They has been a huge supply shortage for years now, but when it cools off ouch. If the prices are based on manufacturing vs demand the long term will not be great for Marlin. MSRP used to not mean much but street prices have been up there in many cases. I expect the 1895s to be up there. The 336Y not so much |
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"Never argue with an idiot. They drag you down to their level, then beat you with experience."
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They are nuts if they think I’m paying that much money for a 16” .30-30. The whole appeal of the 336Y to me was that it was a compact, budget beater. If I was going to spend $1500 on one I’d get a really nice vintage Winchester.
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“It does not take a majority to prevail, but rather an irate, tireless minority keen on setting brush fires of freedom in the minds of men”
- Samuel Adams |
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