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Ouch. I was hoping it would be this year. Those Marlin Dark series really caught my attention, but not many made it out into the wild before they shut down. For some godawful reason I have a desire to suppress a 30-30 lever gun and I refuse/ can't bring myself to cut/thread my old pre-safety Marlins.Q1 2022
I picked up a threaded 357 mag fro the series that preceded the dark. Black stock stainless metal. It is a very nice rifle. I imagine the 3030 would be as well.Ouch. I was hoping it would be this year. Those Marlin Dark series really caught my attention, but not many made it out into the wild before they shut down. For some godawful reason I have a desire to suppress a 30-30 lever gun and I refuse/ can't bring myself to cut/thread my old pre-safety Marlins.
All Ruger got was prints and rights.
They’ve got to design, tool, source, test, all that good stuff from scratch.
Still have my 1978 Wnchester Big Bore in 375 Win. Seldom use it anymore, but treasure it and the memories it and I have made.I didn't realize there were lever gun fans here.
Ruger/Marlin are missing out on the current market of high price and demand. Don't know why.
Hand fitting of a production level firearm in the 20th/21st century? LMAO! GTFO with that. A modern (and by that I mean post WWI) firearms production line, setup correctly and maintained properly should be able to churn out parts that require minimal- if any- hand fitting. You should be able to take a “random” assortment of parts and assemble a functional and reliable firearm. If you are a big manufacturer and an appreciable amount of labor is being spent hand fitting parts to make a gun functional, your tooling is probably beat to shit. I suppose that’s the flip side to the “there just weren’t any craftsmen at Remington” coin...
Smarter than you think.They paid for the name and no tooling??? WOW..
Yeah, mostly agree with you. My translation of the story would be more "a single operator assembles a whole gun from parts (like Wilson combat I think) VS a production line where the first operator assembles 2 screws, puts back in the conveyor, next operator installs the next item or 2, etc.."Hand fitting of a production level firearm in the 20th/21st century? LMAO! GTFO with that. A modern (and by that I mean post WWI) firearms production line, setup correctly and maintained properly should be able to churn out parts that require minimal- if any- hand fitting. You should be able to take a “random” assortment of parts and assemble a functional and reliable firearm. If you are a big manufacturer and an appreciable amount of labor is being spent hand fitting parts to make a gun functional, your tooling is probably beat to shit. I suppose that’s the flip side to the “there just weren’t any craftsmen at Remington” coin...
I have 2 of the Evil Roy's. The actions are very smooth and very light triggers. Great guns.Well this might explain why Ruger has not shipped Vaqueros since last July......prob focusing on getting the Marlin line going, as well as the typical covid excuse and AR’s and semi-autos flying off the shelf. I’m trying to find a 357 4.62“ Vaquero to go with my JM 1894 357. Making the Uberti Evil Roy tuned pistols, which are still shipping from time to time, very tempting. Some say the Ubertis are better anyway. I’m glad Ruger has the Marlin rights!