I also saw a bunch of reports of the .454 Puma's cracking the stock, which I figured you can get around by careful bedding, but I ALSO saw some reports of splitting cases, stretching cases, etc., and wasn't able to find any follow up on those reports to see what the problem was determined to be for sure.
I was looking at my Encore .45-70, and although the gun is also available chambered for 7mm Rem Mag, which is a large-diameter, high-pressure, tapered/bottleneck case, I can't see how the lockup would be as strong as the Marlin 1895/336, and the metal doesn't look much thicker.
Maybe someone brave and wealthy with nothing to do should rebarrel an 1895 in 7mm Mag and single-load hot rounds in it to see how long it holds up/
Seriously though, when it comes to the '92 Winchester and '95 Marlin, what do we REALLY know about action strength of these two types of guns...? Can you tell if a given load is safe in a given gun just because after 500 or 1,000 rounds it hasn't blown up ('yet')?
I would assume some members have fired many thousands of rounds through the .454 rifles by now, let along the venerable .45-70's - and I'm sure some folks are using pretty spicy loads. Just interested to see what our esteemed levergun experts here think about action strength.
