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Marlin 336 forend banded vs capped

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8 comments

  • charliemeyer007
    http://www.GunBroker.com/Auction/ViewItem.aspx?Item=500553738

    Can't help banded vs cap. I don't think the micro grove barrels shoot cast lead bullets all that well.
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  • navc130
    I am not sure on this, but, The round barrel has a band; The octagon barrel does not (maybe??).
    My Mod. 1894 .44 Mag. with a round barrel has a capped forend and no band. I retract my original comment.
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  • 62fuelie
    re: using cast bullets many of the 1894's have "Ballard" style rifling just for the purpose of using cast bullets when you want to. My 1894P has it and does just fine up to 300 grains - that's as high as I have gone with it. I do run a wire through the porting holes every once in a while just to be sure.
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  • MIKE WISKEY
    the other posters refer to the m-1894 in .44 mag. the rifle in the referenced auction is an earlier m-336 in .44 mag. I have owned both and they both worked well, the 336 has a 'longer' action and is slightly 'bulkier' than the m-94. I believe that is the difference between the banded forend and the caped forend.
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  • tone59
    thanks guys
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  • mrs102
    My Marlin 336 SC's (Sport Carbines) have capped forearms. They have shorter barrels and half length magazine tubes. Most other 336's have longer barrels and full length tubes with the banded forearm. There may be exceptions, but that is the basic difference.
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  • PA Shootist
    I have owned various Marlin 336s over the years, including the "regular" carbine (336C) with 20" barrel length, full length magazine tube, and band around forearm, and several "Sporting Carbines" (336SC), which also had same 20" barrel length, but had approx. 2/3 length magazine tube which didn't come as near to the muzzle, and a capped fore-end. Some of the earlier SC's had, as I remember, a deeper dimension on the fore-end also, while the regular carbine fore-end was more slim. The regular 336C was a more "western" design, and the 336T "Texan" even more so, with a straight grip rather than a curved pistol grip. The 336A and 336A-DL had longer 24" barrels, 2/3 magazine tubes, and capped fore-ends, the DL with a bit fancier wood and hand-cut checkering.
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  • PA Shootist
    A note: Just to clarify, there is a later, current Marlin 336A which is a standard 20" bbl length, stamped checkering with diamond pattern, and is not to be confused with the "old" 336A which Marlin catalogued as a full-length rifle.
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