A couple of years ago I bought a used 1980's Marlin .357. They're a neat gun, but I found like most old guns with drift style front sights, they're really annoying to zero, and even worse if you swap between .38 Special and .357 because of the POI shift. I decided I was going to modify it and put a rail and ghost sights on it. The kit I bought was missing a part, I ran short on time and....it still needs some attention.
Marlin apparently lost its way for a while (hence why I bought an old one), but they were reborn a couple of years ago when the lever craze hit the industry. I'm not sure what the results were, but people had high hopes. The fact they added the ability to add modern components (scout scope/red dot and a suppressor) was a plus.
If I was looking to buy new now, I'd research Marlin and seriously look at the Henry's that have side-gate loading. The tube loading is...not my cup of tea.
Can confirm all of that. I made the mistake of buying a Marlin from their Remington / Cerberus Group owned shitty production period (2011-2021ish). After some mechanical re-work, a new trigger, and aftermarket peep sights, it's now a solid little brush gun. If I had it to do over, I'd just find an old one at a gun show or something. I did learn a lot about Marlin during the re-work though, which was its own kind of fun.
Avoid anything with a serial number starting with "MR". A well cared-for rifle with a pre-Remington serial number (no letters) should be good to go, as should anything made after 2021- not sure how Ruger is serializing those. Simply racking the lever can reveal some of the reason why.
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