Marlin never made a 39 in .22 magnum. The closest thing to it is a model 1894M. These can occasionally be found on different gun sale sites such as www.auctionarms.com and www.gunbroker.com and www.gunsamerica.com . Good luck I could be misunderstanding your question, but I own a .22 Marlin model 39 octagon barrel, magazine feed, in good condition. It was made in the early 1900's. I am currently selling this item, so if you're interested, you can email me at ImTheGirlNextDoor@gmail.com. Thanks
You would be better served to have a rifle of this age and vintage caliber visually examined by a gun collector that specializes in Marlin rifles.There are too many variables that could effect the value of such a nice old Marlin lever action rifle.
Mossberg, Savage, Remington, Winchester, Marlin, .22 caliber rifles. They could be lever action, bolt action, pump, or semi auto.
If you state the caliber we could then determine the size of the action.
it might also be a marlin, but try any local gun show
The first letter in your serial number is the key to finding it's age. You can google marlin dates and find a chart with the years.
Your rifle is a Marlin Model 81. Value could range from $50-$145, depending on condition. Most are around $100 or so. Accurate reliable hunting grade rifle.
Marlin, currently owned by Remington, produces lever action and bolt action rifles. They probably could make you a pump action .30-30 but it would be unlikely that you could convince them to do this as a custom job unless you offered tens of thousands of dollars to possibly re-chamber a Remington 7600, modify its magazine to hold and feed the rimmed cartridge and stamp it with Marlin markings. You would do better to go with lever action...that is the action the .30-30 was designed for.
According to the cross-reference list, a Ranger M34 could be a Marlin 50 or 50E autoloader mfg 1931-1934, or a Marlin 80 bolt action repeater, 1935-59, or a Marlin 780 bolt action repeater, 1971-1988.
The guide I use states it came in .22 or .32. If it had a 16" barrel, it was a .22, but longer barrels could have been either.
Condition is the main factor in the value of your rifle, the value could be as low as 75.00 and as high as 450.00 in 90% condition. If the rifle has not been fired the value is up to the person bidding on it. Emmett Answer The Marlin 29 Slide-action repeater was made from 1913-1916. The above numbers should be the patent years so others could be sued if they copied it.
Depedns on what the barrel is marked as to caliber. Could be rim or centerfire.
Yes, someone could make an Action Replay code like that. Why don't you go and try?