Can anyone recommend a gunsmith to shorten and thread
My marlin 336? Cheers
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Can anyone recommend a gunsmith to shorten and thread
My marlin 336? Cheers
Any good gunsmith can do the job
Dean Maisey can do it.
Gunworks have in the past but maybe it was a Robbie pet project.
Cheers mate. I will get in touch with him
However to expand on the first question which seems to be answered. Which Gunsmiths do people recommend for Marlins, Winchester 92s-94 etc repairs. Sorry for thread highjack.
Any Engineer, for that matter. I'm not sure if he's still kicking, but Thomas Rahn in Howick used to take on the odd job. Your friendly local gunshop (SAI, Serious Shooters, H+F, Guncity) should be able to point you to someone local.
Repairs to action. Of a Win 94. Sorry for late reply
What about trigger jobs? Thinking of getting a Marlin 30/30 or 45'70 and have heard the aftermarket drop in parts for triggers are limited?
Whats broken/wrong on the 94?
They may look like that in a rossi 92 but in a 94 that is a bit of an over simplification, no way I would like to make one from scratch if there was any other option. However your right I think I can repair it myself.
Unless you are specifically offended by the floppy Marlin trigger, I would not bother with replacement blades like the Wild West kit.
Really not that hard to do a trigger job on a Marlin. Some polishing of surfaces with a dremel, cutting 1/2 coil off springs at a time etc. Lever guns have fairly simplistic designs by nature.
This bit I disagree with.
Unless you're really careful. Or trying to change sear angles, A FINE file, wet'n'dry emery paper and an oil stone are all you need. Polish the sliding surfaces.
Changing spring characteristics CAN get dangerous if you don't understand how they work, but as suggested, take off a little at a time.
I think a lot of people think guns are voodoo (probably car engines, too) but they are just tools/machines, made by men, and operate on the same basic principals they have for hundreds of years. There really isn't anything difficult about working on them, it's all skills that can be learned. Take your time and remember it's usually easier taking metal off than putting it on.
Only caveat is to doubletriple check for safe function once you've modified it. I usually cock them, safety off, then use 'em for a couple of innings as a cricket bat to make sure they wont accidentally fire.
Just had a Savage 99 threaded, barrel had to be removed to fit the lathe, consider that when you decide who you get to thread it.
Can you buy aftermarket Henry and Marlin triggers?
I've had 2 sav 99's threaded. No problems.
Not like some of the press fit barrels coming from other places.
Z