Yes in a stainless steel model or as the 338MX in a blued version
The Marlin model 336 was introduced in 1948 and is still currently in production. The model 336 is the second best selling high-powered rifle.
You can contact Marlin directly at their 800 number, as they will send you a owner's manual. The model 60 is still made.
The rifle was made by marlin in good condition its worth about 100 dollars. These are usually good shooters as are most Marlin rifles; its it a keeper. It is also known as a Marlin Model 80. Clip is still available for about $16 directly from Marlin.
Marlin Firearms is still in business. Check with them.(marlinfirearms.com)
it was designed in 1959, and first sold in 1960, and still being sold today.
No...the Marlin .22 lever action is the Model 39. An amazing history behind the model 39 and they are still made new (39a) and a great gun. 336 is a round bolt where as the 39 is a square bolt, and is also in its current 39a form a takedown model as well.
Depends on year of manufacture and condition. I paid $385 for my 1952 model which, amazingly, still looks brand new.
As of July, 2010 Marlin Briscoe is still alive.
1954 or earlier. I bought one in early 1954 at a WT Grant store in Buffalo, NY. Wish I still had it in Arizona,Actually the Marlin model 81DL was a promotional model which was made from 1940-1965.the current price range is between 65-110 dollars.
Papoose is the slang name for the 70p family of rifles. The original 70p is out of production. The newer 70pss is still available in the current 2013 Marlin catalog and continues to carry the papoose nickname. The 70pss uses a synthetic stock and stainless steel barrel but the mechanics and design of the rifle mirror the 70p and the rifle case is still branded with the papoose label. As for the original 70p with a wooden stock: The answer is No. The marlin model 70p was made from 1986-1995.
Glenfield Marlin Model 25 rifles were patterned after the Marlin 80C and Marlin 780 rifles. The Glenfield name was added for sales to coast-to-coast chain-stores versus stores that were specific Marlin dealer stores. The Glenfield 25 was manufactured from 1979 through 1982 according to Brophy. Others would suggest the Marlin Glenfield 25 was produced from 1972-1982. Regardless, the Glenfield name was dropped in 1983. The rifle continued as the Marlin Model 25 until 2003, which then became the Marlin 925. Differences between the Marlin and Glenfied were purely cosmestic i.e. birch stocks instead of walnut stock, different trigger guards, and triggers (black instead of gold colored). It is still being produced in .22LR (Marlin 925) and .22 Magnum (Marlin 925M) versions today. Most parts between the Glenfield 25 and Marlin 780 will interchange with no problem. Some of the Glenfield 20 and 25 will interchange as well. However, not all late model parts between the Marlin 780 and Marlin 80 will interchange with those models made in the pre-70s.
The Marlin Model 60 G .410 gauge shotgun is essentially the same firearm as the Marlin Model 59. The Model 59 began Mfg in 1956 and continued to 1965, the model 60G was introduced in 1960 and stopped in 1964. There were 18,603 Model 60G's produced in that time. The retail sticker when new was $24.95, like most of these sturdy firearms it has appreciated in value a bit and has an average retail value of about $100. Not bad considering this was and still is a quite utility brush gun.