45-70 Lever Gun

I recently had a look at a chaps new Marlin.
Stainless with blue/grey laminated stock in 357magnum.
It was screwcut and he had a moderator for it and used it for vermin.
Not sure if the new marlins in 45/70 come that way configured.
I have a custom Lee 6 cavity mould that casts a lovely 420gn flat fronted bullet specifically for a tube mag.
I only have a Uberti 1885 single shot rifle but those bullets shoot very well through it with nitro or better still black powder.
 
Check out skinnersights.com . I've used these on a number of rifles , built like tanks and a vast improvement over factory barrel mounted sights . The Marlin SBL has decent aperture rear sights , but none of the others do .

AB
Cheers, they look very well made and better to have them farther back behind the rail.
 
I’ve owned over 150 Marlin’s ALL pre Remington era . Of which 98% were centerfire . I have a deep affection for the 45-70 but even deeper affection for the 444 . At one point I had 27 or 28 MicroGroove rifled 444’s and two Ballard rifled 444’s . Lots of people tell you that cast won’t work in MicroGroove which is total bull**** just get a mold that drops at about .433-.435” and size at .432 or .433 . I’ve killed a bunch of deer and two bear with 444’s . With the 45-70 all I had were Ballard rifled and I had eight , used cast and jacketed in the 45-70 had my best performance with cast in the 45-70 with bullets that could be sized at .461-.462” .
 
Seen a few comments on the remlin version of the 1895 having issues with build quality.
I belive this is an issue but I can only speak from my own experiences.
I got a remington marlin (sbl) a few years back and yes noticed some issues regarding finish.
What I found was lots of razor sharp edges on machined parts, so much so I cut my finger a few times whilst loading and the action felt really harsh.
On a positive note I couldn't fault the wood fit and finish and everything else was nothing I couldn't sort out with the dremal and polising wheel and I ended up with what I think is a really nice rifle.
The point I'm making is not to rule out a remlin built 95 if one comes available as with minimal skills and a bit of fettling you could end up with a nice gun!
 
Going purely off factory loads am I right in thinking that both the .444 and 45-70 have no ammunition choices that would be legal in Scotland?
 
Going purely off factory loads am I right in thinking that both the .444 and 45-70 have no ammunition choices that would be legal in Scotland?
I think you’re right. Certainly 44 mag too slow and think 45-70 might be the same.

30-30 and 25-35 might do it for Scotland
 
I think you’re right. Certainly 44 mag too slow and think 45-70 might be the same.

30-30 and 25-35 might do it for Scotland
From just a glance even the fastest factory loads look around 100fps too slow (which is ridiculous when looking at the energy the round carries).
 
With 30-30 I just went up Scotland and shot deer with them. Including 16" barreled ones. No one seemed to car one ounce! I never cared too. But it worked, and on red deer.
kingston 019.webp
 
Seen a few comments on the remlin version of the 1895 having issues with build quality.
I belive this is an issue but I can only speak from my own experiences.
I got a remington marlin (sbl) a few years back and yes noticed some issues regarding finish.
What I found was lots of razor sharp edges on machined parts, so much so I cut my finger a few times whilst loading and the action felt really harsh.
On a positive note I couldn't fault the wood fit and finish and everything else was nothing I couldn't sort out with the dremal and polising wheel and I ended up with what I think is a really nice rifle.
The point I'm making is not to rule out a remlin built 95 if one comes available as with minimal skills and a bit of fettling you could end up with a nice gun!
Thanks for explaining this. That sort of fettling is something I could do.
 
It's an NRA Centennial model. Nothing hugely collectible but handles nice. ~Muir
I had the NRA commemorative Rifle , the model that was basically a Model 64 . It was probably the most accurate Winchester 30/30 I've owned . Somebody wanted it more than me though and traded me a Remington 81 in 35 Rem for it ............... which I traded for something else .

AB
 
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