The Marlin 336: Why I Learned to Embrace the .30-30 and Forget the 94 Winchester

marlin 336 30-30
October 28, 2024  
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Categories: Assorted Ramblings

Lever action rifles have been part of American gun culture since the Henry .44 Flat hit the market in 1860. The platform has waxed and waned in popularity. Recently, the virtues of a lightweight, fast-firing, rifle with reliable manual operation have been rediscovered and the lever gun is back in a big way. New rifles boasting attachment-ready handguards, threaded barrels, and black cerakote share space with blued steel and wood stocked models little changed from their counterparts made a hundred years ago. The Marlin 336, otherwise known simply as the Marlin 30-30, has a leg in both camps.

The Marlin Model 336, now made under Ruger’s tutelage is available in a Dark model with all the upgrades, as well as in their classic configurations, a Trapper model made of stainless steel and a laminate stock, and the Classic with tricked in blued steel and walnut. Unfortunately, demand for these reborn 336 rifles outstrips supply and it can be hard to get into a new lever gun. Fortunately, the Marlin Model 336 was produced in quantity and quality well before Ruger bought back the brand and there are millions of fine used examples to pick. Although I grew up with a Winchester 94, the most popular lever action, as my deer rifle, the Marlin has always had a certain appeal. After years of hesitation, I finally sprung for an old Marlin 336.

The Marlin 336: A Storied History

World War II had forced gun companies to curtail their normal operations to meet war demand and workers lived in a rationed economy, earning dollars that simply sat. The post-war boom reabsorbed the 16 million GIs returning from overseas and the country entered into a demand-side explosion. Companies could return to normalcy as Americans could now spend their money while a wrecked world looked to American factories to revive their fortunes.

sears catalog marlin 1893
Sears Roebuck’s 1897 mail catalog shows the latest Marlin wares. The Marlin 1893 sold well, but by 1948, it was showing its age.

The Marlin Firearms Company had gone through the wartime motions and emerged from the war with a line of lever action rifles that were dated. The Marlin 1893, economized in 1936, served as the company’s mid-sized deer rifle. It was hard to produce and did not have the action strength of its competition: the Winchester 1894. It also now had to compete with a renewed interest in farther-shooting bolt action rifles that were intimately familiar to returning GIs. Marlin diversified its rifle line and gave the venerable Model 1936 a facelift. In 1948, the Model 336 was born.

Despite the challenges facing the lever action and the Marlin company, the Model 336 proved to be unbelievably popular. To date, there are over four million examples produced making it the second most popular lever action rifle on the American market, under the exceptionally long-lived 1894 Winchester. The Model 336 has been produced in a number of barrel lengths ranging from 16 to 26 inches and in calibers ranging from varmint rounds like the .219 Zipper to the big bore .375 Winchester and .38-55. But by far the most popular chamberings are .30-30 Winchester and .35 Remington.

30-30 winchester cartridges
The .30-30 Winchester is, by far, the most popular chambering for the Marlin 336. But all the others are serviceable.

The Marlin 336 was immediately appealing thanks to its stronger action and the retention of the 1893’s side ejection port. Winchester rifles ejected their hot brass skyward, ideally over your head and wrongly, down your shirt. The side ejection also enabled the shooter to mount an optic on the top of the receiver. The first Marlin 336 rifles were not tapped and drilled for a Weaver mount, but that addition was quickly implemented. Curiously, until recent production, the 336 featured two plug screws in the left side of the receiver that allowed the shooter to mount a William’s style peep sight, a feature imminently familiar to shooters used to the M1 platform of rifles from the war.

The Marlin 336 came in a number of wood grades ranging from birch to walnut and made use of both stainless steel in some later models. But the archetypical 336 is the 20 inch carbine model with a plain birch stock and blued steel appointments. That rifle was chambered in the archetypical lever action round, the .30-30 Winchester.

Marlin Firearms Company continued to produce the Model 336 in North Haven, Connecticut for a number of years. In that time, there was only one appreciable change to the design: the addition of a crossbolt safety in addition to the half-cock safety implemented in the 1980s. In the 1990s, the gun industry underwent enormous changes on two fronts: changes to the business model and changes in politics. The 1990s saw the Clinton Assault Weapons Ban that nullified modern rifle features to make them legal, while handgun companies reduced magazine capacities and individual states implemented restrictions to make it more difficult to sell in their states without onerous safety features.

Marlin 336 for Sale

Buy it and back the bang
Lookin’ for a Model 336 for sale? Here ya go!

Where to Find Your Marlin 30-30 For Sale

In 1993, George H.W. Bush left the White House. He was the last World War II veteran to occupy the position and his departure signaled a changing of the political guard and an economic guard as well. The Greatest Generation that came to own rifles like the 336 also had jobs for life fitting these rifles off the assembly line. Now that generation headed for the exit to enjoy their golden years, leaving fewer trained replacements with each passing year. Labor costs continued to rise, and capital costs rose parallel simply to keep up production at a given quality.

Although these changes hampered modern rifle makers, it also hurt those who made older designs that needed more hand fitting. The 1990s famously spelt trouble for revolver makers like Smith & Wesson and Colt, but it also brought about the demise of classic rifles like the Savage 99. Winchester gave up with American manufacturing altogether in 2006 and Marlin continued on wearily.

In a Sears/K-Mart-like merger, Marlin bought a struggling H&R and consolidated in Gardner, Massachusetts. Although it might have been hoped that the two struggling companies could buoy each other and diversify their risks, it did not work. The Freedom Group, an investment consortium, that had bought a struggling Remington and DPMS, picked up Marlin in 2007. The new operation helmed by Freedom Group was renamed the Remington Outdoor Company. The legendary New Haven plant closed in 2010, and Marlin operated out of Remington plants at Ilion, New York. Over the next decade, a further slide in quality was noticed, a decline only terminated with the bankruptcy of the Remington Outdoor Company in 2020. Sturm, Ruger & Co. bought the troubled Marlin assets and reintroduced the Marlin Model 336 to the public in 2023.

Features: JM Marlin Style

marlin 336 lever action rifle with hatchet

My particular Marlin 30-30 was made in the New Haven plant in 1972. Aside from one prominent rust spot, it is a bog standard 336 that is only marginally different from the new ones you can get today. It features an uncheckered birch buttstock and fore-end and a deep blued finish on the solid steel receiver, standard lever loop, barrel, and magazine tube. The tube extends nearly the full length of the 20 inch barrel and has a six-round capacity. Like all other Marlins, the 336 loads through a gate on the right side of the receiver.

marlin 30-30 336 bolt throw lever action

Above the loading gate is the prominent bare steel round bolt, the chief differentiation between the 336 and the earlier 1893. The bolt retracts reward to cock the exposed hammer on the cycling stroke of the lever. Bringing the lever back pushes the bolt forward and a lug at the rear of the lever pushes a floating locking block into the recess at the back of the bolt. This rifle was made before the inclusion of a cross-bolt safety and features only a half-cock safety.

The top of the receiver is solid except for four tapped plug screws, which can be removed and a Weaver scope base mounted. Unlike the newer rifles, this vintage 336 includes two plug screws on the left side of the receiver for mounting a peep sight. A Skinner sight could also be mounted on top in lieu of a scope. But when fully dressed down, the 336 has a ladder adjustable rear sight notch and a bead front sight that is hooded to guard against sun glare.

marlin 336 left side
This rifle features the JM Marlin gold trigger. It breaks clean at 3 1/4 lbs.

This 336 features a checkered plastic butt plate and grip cap at the bottom of the pistol grip of the buttstock. It also features the characteristic black bullseye inlay just behind the grip cap. There is no feature here, but it is a signature of the Marlin company. Another signature of original JM Marlins is the use of Micro-Groove rifling, a set of smaller rifling grooves in the barrel that produces less deformation on the bullet and aids in accuracy.

marlin 336 buttplate
Pieces of plastic are few and far between on the Marlin 336.

Marlin 336 Quick Specs

  • Caliber: .30-30 Winchester
  • Capacity: 6+1
  • Barrel Length: 20 inches
  • Overall Length: 38 1/4 inches
  • Length of Pull: 13 5/8 inches
  • Weight: 6 1/2 pounds
marlin 336 loading gate lever action rifle

On the Range with the Marlin Model 336

The Marlin 336 is a proven platform that is about as handy on the shoulder as a modern AR-15 and it has plenty of power to take most game animals and function as a personal defense option. As we count, it has had close to 80 years of history to lean on. In that time, it has become the archetypical deer rifle, though it is capable of much more. If you are looking for a rifle to fit any of the above mentioned roles, the Marlin 336 is a formidable option, among many, to consider. My trigger time with the 336 so far won’t outweigh the history, but it might give a few insights and set a baseline of what you, the shooter, might want to know.

I bought this particular Marlin 336 because I wanted to get back in with a cartridge I like, the .30-30. But it also represented a chance for me to shoot a Marlin lever for the first time. Although the 336 comes with very useable iron sights that are excellent for snap shooting inside 75-100 yards, I did most of my shooting mounted with an optic. Most folks today will opt for a scope or even a red dot. I used a Vortex Crossfire II 3-9×40 in order to evaluate the different types of ammunition I ultimately ran through the 336.

I began my reacquaintance by sighting in the scope to the rifle from a distance of fifty yards. Loading the 336 is straightforward, but it is not as effortless as pushing in a magazine and letting fly. The rounds are depressed against the gate pushed into the tube one by one until the tube is full. The magazine spring is not butter smooth, but I didn’t have to fight to get the rounds into the rifle. To unload, the action has to be cycled and the rounds ejected. Unlike the bigger Marlin 1895, you can’t easily depress the gate to coax the rounds from the magazine.

marlin 336 shooting

Sight In

My first round of Winchester Power Point 150 grain ammunition touched high and right and I made my adjustments and walked my rounds into the bullseye. I was surprised how little recoil the .30-30 had. I remembered it having more, but there is a good reason the .30-30 is often handed to kids as a first rifle. From the bench, recoil was a slow push on the shoulder and my eyes were back on the scope in no time. The Marlin cycles smoothly without disturbing the sight and without the rattling I had grown accustomed to on my old Winchester. I would put the action’s effortlessness on par with modern Henry lever actions.

I moved my target out to 100 yards, rezeroed with the same ammunition. After calling it a day, I set back out with more ammo and more targets to see how different .30-30 ammunition behaved at different distances from 100-300 yards. I shot the Marlin using Winchester 150 and 170 grain soft point ammunitions, as pedestrian a load as the .30-30 comes. Until recently, soft point flatnosed bullets were the only safe option to load nose-to-primer in a tubular magazine. Most .30-30 ammo will have a flat profile, but I also tested Hornady’s LeverEvolution 160 grain FTX spitzer load, which is about as aerodynamic as .30-30 gets. I also tested a new-to-me load in the Federal 150 grain Barnes TSX, which is an all-copper lead-free hollow point.

The Problem with .30-30

Because of its historical baggage in use with tube magazines, the .30-30, which is not particularly high velocity compared to newer .30 caliber cartridges, is perceived to have short legs and low power. I was raised to never shoot anything with a .30-30 past 100 yards because the round loses all of its power and it will not leave any blood to track an animal. Of course, that advice was wrongheaded. While light on the shoulder, the .30-30 has killed everything from lynxs to lions and that flatnosed bullet. It is slower and not as aerodynamic as a spitzer round, but it is still a smokeless high velocity round that doesn’t drop like a fly at any reasonable distance.

Shooting Impressions

Once zeroed, the Marlin 336 had no appreciable drop at 150 yards with any of the ammunitions I used, except for the Winchester 170 grainers, which dropped 2 inches from the point of aim. Not enough to talk about, depending on what you are shooting at. The .30-30 starts to go off the rails at 300 yards, where those 170 grain pills are shooting 28 inches low. The Hornady LeverEvolution round was the flattest shooting. It dropped just 14 inches, with the other 150 grain loads running at the 19-inch mark.

All the ammunition functioned flawlessly in the 336 and I had no failures to feed or fire. But those LeverEvolution and 170 grain Winchester rounds did thump the shoulder a bit more and, with a high mounted scope, the comb of the stock got friendlier with my cheek.

marlin 336 lever action accuracy

I did not expect bolt action accuracy out of the 336. It has a rear locking bolt and the barrel certainly is not floated or made of carbon fiber. As shocking as it might sound, no-one has retrofitted a 336 in a new round with Creedmoor in the name. But the accuracy does come right down to the shooter. The .30-30’s reputation for a shorter range is partially due to the stock iron sights that don’t lend themselves well to bullseye shooting. Using the Winchester 150 grain load, I could coax five rounds into a 2-inch group at 100 yards. The 170 grain load was a bit wider with a 2.3 inch group and the Barnes load split the difference. The LeverEvolution round was the clear winner in the accuracy department. This ammunition was consistent and gave me a 1.5 inch group at 100 yards. All things considered, all these loads are MOA of deer and varmints as long as you know your drop.

Overall, this Marlin 336 is lightweight, low recoiling, and ambidextrous for my left-handed sensibilities. The accuracy is not target rifle grade, but better than some would give it credit for and more than useable for the purposes I intended: deer hunting in timber where shots will likely never exceed 200 yards. Alternatively, this old hand could take a red dot optic and play the role of home defense rifle with a good hollow-point load. The only knock on this great rifle is that this particular variation does not come with sling studs, a point that is readily fixed given that the Marlin 336 has such an expansive aftermarket of parts and accessories.

Marlin 336: Buy New or Used?

The Marlin 336 lever action was not gone for long before popular demand brought it back under Ruger’s umbrella. Ruger is making them in a few different configurations, all of which are in .30-30, and all of them command a premium. Some of that is demand simply exceeds supply. Add on optional peep sights, stainless steel hardware, and checkered walnut stocks, and the prices climb relative to the millions of existing, Plain Jane pre-Ruger 336s. Ruger is making an excellent product, but when searching for your first or next lever action, don’t overlook a good used rifle. There are plenty of them out there with decades of life left to live.

For more lever action reads:

Magpul ELG Marlin Lever Action Accessories (breachbangclear.com)

Rossi Ranch Hand: Original Mare’s Leg (breachbangclear.com)

For a take on the new Ruger-made Marlin 336:

Marlin 336 Classic Rifle Review | Field & Stream (fieldandstream.com)

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Jim Maybrick

Jim Maybrick

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