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The difference between the 39A and 39AS is the S was added to 39a in 1988 for an addition of the hammer block safety and a rebounding hammer. It also has swivel studs added to the butt stock and forearm tip.

This one goes to the range tomorrow, 19 longrifle cartridges, 24 inch barrel, weighs 6.5 pounds unloaded.

Cleaned it of the grease in the workings from the factory when I got home, oiled the stock to protect it from the desert heat drying it out and we'll put 300 rds through her tomorrow at 50 and 100 yds, getting the sights regulated so I know where to set the buckhorn rear sight for elevation at the various.

I've also got a 39A from 1947 that's pristine and put away as a collector in one of the safes. Anyone else have a 39A or AS Marlin? The numbers made on these are in the millions, first produced back in the late 1800's.

Picture by Marlin Firearms Co.


The following on the Marlin 39AS rifle written by Randy Wakeman:

Billed as the oldest continuously manufactured rifle in the world, the Marlin 39 began life as John Marlin's Model 1891 (used by Annie Oakley), redesigned as the 1897, then the Model 39 in 1922. The "39A" designation appeared in 1939. The "third variation" of the Model 39 series appeared in 1946, the fourth variation added a fluted comb, the fifth variation was introduced in 1951, and Marlin's "Micro-Groove" rifling appeared in 1953. The "redesigning" is generally considered so slight that the rifle is regarded as essentially the same article for over the last 100 years with in well in excess of two million produced.

Forged steel parts set this rifle apart from many in the pack. It remains my favorite .22 lever-action rifle. With a capacity of 19 .22 LR rounds, you can load up and hunt for a long while without fumbling for clips or otherwise bothering to reload.

The 24 inch barreled version has enough heft and feel to make it very easy to shoot well. And, shoot well it does. With CCI Velocitor ammo, my 39A shoots into an inch at 100 yards. Using Lapua Speed Ace or Lapua 36 gr. HP ammo it groups tighter yet. More accuracy than you need, really more accuracy than you can use for common sub-75 yard small game hunting.

New Marlin triggers are a bit on the heavy side, but with use they seem to lighten up a bit. My current rifle breaks at a repeatable 3 lbs. 9 oz., with no take-up or sand, perfectly acceptable for any of my purposes.

Feeding, extraction, and ejection are flawless with most ammo I've tried. I'm trying to remember if I've ever had a failure to extract; I don't recall any. The street price of the 39A has crept up to the $475 area. With forged and machined parts, solid walnut stocks, and attractive bluing, the quality of both raw materials and finished product are self-evident.

In this age of the false economy of skimping on firearms themselves and the proliferation of plastic and stamped steel parts, it is refreshing to shoot and enjoy an American Classic that has not sacrificed quality, heft, and feel for the sake of trendiness. The Marlin 39A remains my favorite lever action rifle of any type and one of the finest .22's made. Not much can replace the feel of walnut, the look of bluing, the fit of machined forgings, and the robustness of the Marlin 39A's design.

Comparatively few rifles, especially .22's, give me the feeling that they can (or should) be passed down through the years for generation after generation to enjoy. The Marlin 39A achieves that rare, precious distinction as both best of breed, and one of the best ever.


Brownie
 

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Discussion Starter · #2 ·
Great morning putting 250 or so rds downrange at distances from 50-110 yrds getting the elevator settings memorized, the mid elevator setting holdover/under for those ranges [ like a BSZ on my M1a's ], and working on my accuracy shooting offhand to 100 yrds.

Gun is very accurate and will take rabbit sized critters with irons out to 110 yrds all day. I'm going to keep shooting this one, it's a pleasure to shoot and score with.

Brownie
 

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Discussion Starter · #4 ·
Besides banging the M1a twice a month for 40-60 rds per session, I think my rifle skills will remain with this Marlin 39AS for awhile.

I broke it down, bore snaked it and regreased it in less than 15 minutes and it's ready for another session next week. :)

I was pleasantly surprised how accurate it is with the iron sights. I might have scoped this one but I think it's good to go just the way it sits with the irons. It'll give me more lever practice for the Winchester 30-30 that's always in the truck should I need to use it defensively too. :thumsup

My little Browning take-down 22lr shooting 22 shorts will still be used for shooting golf balls out of the air in the desert. :drinks

22's are a lot of fun and cheap practice for those reactive instinct shooting skills.

Thanks for the well wishes sir.

Brownie
 

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That is a SWEEEEET gun Brownie! I had a Marlin .22 lever gun when I was a kid, don't remember the model though.

I still have a J.C. Higgins Mod 29 .22 rifle from my youth... Now that I think of it, that gun has to be almost 50 years old by now. It was a gift from my grandfather when I was 10.... It belonged to him for years before that
 

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Cool!

I still keep and fire the 39A that my father passed down to me. Shoots straight as a laser ever time. I think my 4 sons will likely be fighting for inheritance rights after I'm gone.:angel
 

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Discussion Starter · #7 ·
Appreciate the thoughts Capn.

Jbuck,

You are lucky to have had that gun handed down to you. Congrats on keeping and still shooting it. Finer 22's will be hard to find.

Brownie
 

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Very nice Brownie. That ones on my wish list! I missed out picking up a very old one at Stricklands in MA a few years ago. Ran out of money because I had just bought a H&R Sportsman break top 22 revolver and I was too low on funds to get both. Went back the next week but it was gone.
 

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Brownie,

I have a printed picture of me, as a kid, shooting my 39A from our front porch in Missouri. My dad is there watching. I wish I could scan it somehow for a post here. I'm sure many members here have similar photos, but I think mine is pretty awesome.

Jim
 

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Discussion Starter · #12 · (Edited)
They're great guns.
I have one
Just really don't like levers

AFS
Levers are one of the most instinctive pointing rifles you can find besides the old pump actions by Remington. Many people don't like levers, but for first hit capability as soon as it hits the shoulder by those who know how to use them correctly, they're outstanding. My uncles could take deer that were flat out running by just snap shooting them when I was a kid with their 30-30's.

I've got a Rossi stainless 357 lever model 92 that's been worked with trigger, lever, and hammer having been smoothed so that you can lever the gun with your pinky finger. Very fast followup shots without taking from the shoulder, most levers are rugged and ultra reliable.

Brownie
 

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Discussion Starter · #13 · (Edited)
update range report with photo

Took the 39A Marlin out for a spin today. The accompanying photo shows 21 of 30 shots inside a 3" circle [ 70% inside 3" ] at 100 yrds bench rested with open rear leaf iron sights [ 19% into 1" ]. The black diamond is 1" square. Looks like I might have one low out of the orange, the rest are not mine but the target backing from previous shooters. Still, if we count the one low out of the orange, it's 68% hits inside 3" at 100 yrds. and 97% hit rate inside 6". Not bad for old tired eyes at 300 feet :D

The wind was steady from the right at 10-12 mph so the group is mostly just left of center. The ones in the black diamond and centered left to right on the target were when the wind took a break for a second or two and I'd get a shot off.

The more I shoot this rifle, the more I like it. It's accurate, and would prove to be more accurate if I scoped it, which I don't plan on doing with this one. I was using Remington 36 grain HP's listed at 1280 fps at the muzzle and 1010 fps at 100 yds.

The rifle is doped on the rear leaf for 50 yds dead on hold. I was holding high center at 100 yds today. I'm pleased with the performance of this load and rifle to say the least. This combination rifle/load is easily capable of kill shots on rabbits or ground chucks at 100 yrds and squirrels and rats at 50 yds open sighted if I do my part.
 

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Discussion Starter · #14 · (Edited)
Well, besides shooting the scoped M1a today http://floridaconcealedcarry.com/Forum/showthread.php?t=5049

I also stood some empty 12 ga. shotgun shells up at 25 yrds on the berm and had at it iron sighted offhand with the Marlin 39A 22lr using Remington 36 grain HP's listed at 1280 fps at the muzzle and 1010 fps at 100 yds.

10 shotgun shells, 10 shots, with only two misses [ both just off to the left side ]. The 9th shot just touched the shell, you could see it wiggle but it didn't fall.

I'm really happy with the way this rifle handles and shoots offhand unsupported. Should be good for the critters that want to dig in my back yard all the time :D

Brownie
 
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