
Denis
Wouldn't mind having one in a slow twist rate to shoot pistol bullets.AJMD429 wrote:I'd take a 16" 1894 with a threaded muzzle in any of their calibers...
How about in 357/44 Bain & Davis - with a fast twist to stabilize 220 grain bullets at 1000 fps...
Or an 1894 in 25-20 or 38-40 or 44-40,
No...Panzercat wrote:I hear Remington is opening up custom shop called "marlin".
That could prove useful.....Rusty wrote:I want an 1894 in .327 Federal, or a .32-20 whichever comes first.
Hmmmm....that would mean my 357/44 B&D could be done - just a new barrel - all the other parts are the same as their stock 44 Mag. Maybe shorten the magazine and fit a threaded 16" barrel...DPris wrote:Anything coming out of the CS will have to start out with a production gun in some basic form.
Today's CEO's are so far removed from the shop floor that they are lucky if they can recognize their own product..45colt wrote:Over on Marlin Owners one member who spent His life working for Marlin, related that during the buyout the CEO from Remington visited the Marlin plant and told the workforce that these guns could be built by anyone.......... anywhere..
From what I have seen He's got a lot to learn.
This is why so many companies are failing. They may not be gone yet, but they are headed that way. I have two customers that are on the ropes. One just sold to a Canadian firm, the other had a CEO run it into the ground. The new CEO is trying the same things to get back on track, with the same results. They are circling the drain and don't even realize it.tman wrote:Today's CEO's are so far removed from the shop floor that they are lucky if they can recognize their own product..45colt wrote:Over on Marlin Owners one member who spent His life working for Marlin, related that during the buyout the CEO from Remington visited the Marlin plant and told the workforce that these guns could be built by anyone.......... anywhere..
From what I have seen He's got a lot to learn.
I sincerely hope you're right! But it's not like they didn't earn the bashing. I'm in the wait and see category. When enough people begin speaking highly of the latest products, I'll be glad to also look at them and praise them.DPris wrote:The PIPS (People In Power) involved at the time are no longer running the Marlin operation.
Current PIPs are very much aware of the QC dump & the damage it caused to the brand.
New attitude.
They've invested millions in new equipment & training, and they're trying hard to bring Marlin's leverguns back.
The results are showing.
Eternally bashing Marlin for that error, which they've admitted & taken steps to correct, is pointless.
Equally so refusing to even look at a new one.
Inspect any new Marlin levergun personally, in hand, before committing, and just carry on.
Denis
Heh, yea, anything made by Rem with the Marlin name on it, isn't a Marlin. Its a Remington repro of a Marlin. Considering they abandoned the old Marlin factory and workers completely.Panzercat wrote:I hear Remington is opening up custom shop called "marlin".
I'll just wait for MM93 to give them the ok, I doubt there's a more qualified authority around here or most places.marlinman93 wrote:I sincerely hope you're right! But it's not like they didn't earn the bashing. I'm in the wait and see category. When enough people begin speaking highly of the latest products, I'll be glad to also look at them and praise them.DPris wrote:The PIPS (People In Power) involved at the time are no longer running the Marlin operation.
Current PIPs are very much aware of the QC dump & the damage it caused to the brand.
New attitude.
They've invested millions in new equipment & training, and they're trying hard to bring Marlin's leverguns back.
The results are showing.
Eternally bashing Marlin for that error, which they've admitted & taken steps to correct, is pointless.
Equally so refusing to even look at a new one.
Inspect any new Marlin levergun personally, in hand, before committing, and just carry on.
Denis
Just what I was thinking, making a gun that actually WORKS!!marlinman93 wrote:When will they have time to do custom work? Seems all their spare time is taken up fixing QC issues!
Their idea of a custom is a gun that doesn't need to go back for repairs!
They had a chance and blew it. I' rather see Marlin remain a quality product only available as used, than the poor reproduction it has become under Freedom Group. They have blown with both the quality of product and the way they treated the employees, I might add.DPris wrote:The PIPS (People In Power) involved at the time are no longer running the Marlin operation.
Current PIPs are very much aware of the QC dump & the damage it caused to the brand.
New attitude.
They've invested millions in new equipment & training, and they're trying hard to bring Marlin's leverguns back.
The results are showing.
Eternally bashing Marlin for that error, which they've admitted & taken steps to correct, is pointless.
Equally so refusing to even look at a new one.
Inspect any new Marlin levergun personally, in hand, before committing, and just carry on.
Denis