RedTag
AH veteran
The Winchester 1886 is an excellent and very strong design; there’s a good reason it’s been around for so long. The Marlin 1895 in its modern form has been around since the 1970s, based on the 336 action. Note the original 1895 looked more like the square bolt 1894 and stopped producing sometime around the Great Depression if I recall correctly. They released the .450 Marlin in the year 2000, based on the .458x2” (shortened .458 Winchester Magnum) but the belt made longer to prevent chambering in other rifles like .338 WM, and in doing so lost the opportunity for one way interchangeability like what we have in .458 WM and Lott. This is what never made sense to me. The .45-70 was already achieving high levels of performance and doing so quite safely in established lever action firearms. The .450 was basically duplicating that performance and offering no other advantages or flexibility. The .45-70 can still be loaded with low pressure black powder loads if one desires. I thought the .450 could be kind of a neat short action big bore bolt action cartridge, like it’s wildcat predecessor, but in the lever action 1895 platform it just never made sense to me.I just did a quick search and you are indeed correct. At some point I read an article about why the 450 Marlin was invented and it had something to do with the availability of 45-70 or 45-70 lever guns. But it appears that wasn't true. Researching now, it appears the 450 Marlin was an attempt to make a higher performance 45-70 cartridge, that idiots couldn't accidently put in a 45-70.
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