08 January 2008, 16:08
Two toneWho has the guts to try this ?
quote:
Originally posted by Tom Hunter:
quote:
...the safe operating pressure of the Marlin 1895 45-70 is 40,000 CUP
Why should one buy a new gun (Marlin 1895) in .45-70 if the potential of this cartridge can only be achieved with handloads or by buying very expensive special ammo i.e. Buffallo Bore or Garrett’s, if the same gun is available in .450 Marlin that can do all what a beefed up .45-70 can do, while the .450 Marlin is available without all the hassle, with better accuracy and without the risk of inadvertently stuffing an +P load into an old trapdoor rifle?
---
Tom
Umm......maybe because we ENJOY handloading and load development??
That's why I'm here anyway. If you find handloading to be a 'hassle' then you
should buy a 450 and factory ammo and be done with it. But why are you here on Accurate Reloading?
09 January 2008, 01:28
Allan DeGrootAs was stated by a Hornady engineer the 450Marlin is a 45-70 for shooters who don't reload.
that pretty much sums up what the 450marlin is all about.
If you reload get a 45-70. If you DON'T get a 450.
The ORIGINAL discussion, "Plan A", was with Hornady and Marlin going to SAAMI to create a "+P" standard for the 45-70l, that didn't work out.
The 450Marlin was "Plan B"
"Do you reload?"
whenever someone asks for advice in choosing between a 450 and a 45-70 that's the question I ask, it's the ONLY question I ask.
It is the ONLY question that is relevant to the difference between the two cartridges.
AD
10 January 2008, 06:47
cliff painterWill not work in a levergun Tom, bullets are too long. Hornady makes the 45 70 cases about a tenth of an inch shorter because leverevolution
bullets are longer from the crimp groove to the tip. That said I have never seen a 450 marlin cartridge though I suspect the same bullets are used in both the 45 70 and 450M.
You could cut off the rubber.
Whit Spurzon said this earlier and nobody noticed.
11 January 2008, 04:06
Tyler KempYou could modify the Marlin to cycle rounds .1 inch longer.
Love shooting precision and long range. Big bores too!
Recent college grad, started a company called MK Machining where I'm developing a bullpup rifle chassis system.