Experiences with my marlin .357
On 7/18/14, 11:27 AM, Tim wrote:
I bought mine new in the early 80's and liked the idea of having a matching round for my dan Wesson.
It was nice to shoot and I went through several boxes of Remington,
Winchester and other known brands of quality rounds.
One thing I noticed is though you could shoot ,38's in it, for some
reason they didn't want to load the barrel well.
Found out it was due to the shorter casings, the .38's would sometimes
rise in a higher angle and miss the end of the breech.
It was more dedicated to .357 and that was ok. But still I thought for a
rifle the cartridge combination was a bit weak, so I traded it in for a
Ruger model 44
which was semi-auto 44 mag, and now I had a rife and pistol with
matching calipers again. It was an interesting rifle with a 4 round
rotary clip ea 4+I. And it was ok, and more satisfying to shoot,
but the rotary clip was giving problems not holding the cartridges
straight. This became as a known defect with that rifle, otherwise it
was a great shooter.
But I couldn't have that, so I traded it in on an M1-Garrand. Now we're
talking.... Sorry for this block post but this iPhone doesn'take
paragraphs well
The loading ramps on some of the .357 MAG/.38 SPECIAL lever guns can be
set to handle one or the other of those rounds properly. Yours might
have been one of those. The problem is that the .38 SPECIAL round is
shorter than the .357 MAG round.
The barrel on my lever gun is engraved .357 MAGNUM. The importer told me
that some of these 1892 Winchester clones handle both rounds properly
and some do not, and that if I wanted to shoot .38 SPECIALS only, they'd
be glad to adjust the rifle accordingly. Apparently the 1873 Winchester
clones do not have the feeding problem and will digest either round.
I wasn't planning to shoot .38 SPECIALS in the rifle anyway, so it won't
be an issue for me.
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