“There is no growth in the comfort zone.”--Jocko Willink
"You can never have too many knives." --Joe Ambercrombie
Though the 41f changes were bemoaned for adding fingerprint and photo requirements to trusts and in the process, requiring a revision of e file which took it offline for quite a while, the elimination of the arbitrary and capricious CLEO signature requirements is a great improvement.
The CLEO notice is just that, a notice to them. They don’t have any say in the process.
Back when CLEO signatures were still a thing our local, city PD Chief, sheriff and DA had all stopped signing NFA forms but there was an old District Court Judge who was the last one in the county who would sign off. Since only certain types of judges (those who adjudicate felony criminal cases) could sign as a CLEO he received a call from an ATF examiner who was not used to seeing judges sign as CLEOs. As the Judge likes to tell it, he told her, “young lady, if I can sentence someone to death I can sign off on a Form 4 !”
Im often amused, or amazed, at the reluctance to scope a lever gun. I can see not drilling holes in older, more unusual or collectible guns, but I dont get not using glass or other modern sights if it helps shoot better if its a using or working gun. A red dot or scope are both improvements for most uses. Ive drilled some old stuff, like an original 1886 that needed a receiver sight, it had already been refinished and had spectacular wood added, so I didnt feel too bad about it. It wouldnt bother me to have a older gun with updated optic if it was put to good use, and not just an exercise in being different or shocking traditionalists.
I wouldnt hesitate to drill an older well used 94 for a sight upgrade as needed. I threatened to make a pre-64 94 into an angle eject so I could mount a scope properly. I may do one one day, but I was able to lay hands on an angle eject gun. I think its one of the very best things Winchester did to the 94, and totally eliminates whatever perceived advantage marlins had as far as ease of scoping. Somehow word of the angle ejects coming along in the early 80s seems to have escaped many peoples attention, I still see occasional comments online about how much better marlins are because of how you can mount a scope on them easier. Um, yeah, almost 40 years ago and a couple or so million guns ago they changed that.
Thank you. Id like to read more about his lever gun work and ideas.
Last edited by Malamute; 12-11-2018 at 09:29 PM.
Or I'll stick with the 200-240 grain zone for the Marlin. There is a lot of discussion around about the challenge of Marlin's 1:38 twist in .44's stabilizing 300 and heavier slugs.
“Remember, being healthy is basically just dying as slowly as possible,” Ricky Gervais
Interesting such discussion here. Sadly, you have to wade through a bunch of derp to get it.
https://www.marlinowners.com/forum/1.../144597?page=5
.
-----------------------------------------
Not another dime.
It was a nasty, rainy day today, so I did the obvious thing - read this thread from beginning to end.
I'm considering adding a sling to my '81 production M94. It'd be a carrying, rather than shooting, sling. The rear swivel would obviously be attached to the buttstock. I've seen front swivels attached to the magazine tube and to the forend band. Does it matter which, and if so, which way is preferable?
Brought this home from Christmas get together - grandpa’s 1969 Teddy Roosevelt Commemorative Winchester 94.
That old box of ammo has 9 rounds in it and I think the other 11 are the total round count. The poor box is shreddded - I don’t think Grandpas concept of preserving the box was quite on point.
The gun itself is in pretty decent shape. The action is pretty sloppy though. The lever and trigger flop around if you shake the gun.
--Josh
“Formerly we suffered from crimes; now we suffer from laws.” - Tacitus.
Daughter #1, 94 Trapper .44 Mag.
“There is no growth in the comfort zone.”--Jocko Willink
"You can never have too many knives." --Joe Ambercrombie