Well I came across a marlin 336w 30-30 that was manufactured in 2008, he’s unsure how many rounds have been down the barrel. Here are the details, he’s asking 1500$, what do you guys think ??
The classic Marlin 336w in 30-30 in very good condition with basic Pine Ridge Lever Action 3-9x40 scope
Blued steel action, barrel and lever
Chambered in 30-30
Lever action
6 round tubular magazine
Good condition Cabelas Pine Ridge Lever Action 3-9x40 scope
Gold trigger
Original Marlin butt plate
Wood stock - has some carry marks
Very good condition - typical handling and wear marks
JM stamped - 2008 manufacture
Based on purchases that I have made - some turned out to be real "dogs" and some turned out to be real "gems" - and your stated purpose is for "hunting" - I presume to be shooting it - you mention many things about the "looks" but nothing about the important things that likely make it work well or not.
What I have seen - shot count can be misleading - if it was not being properly cleaned - the chamber and the bore can be a mess of pits, gouges and scratches - is not from shooting it - is from not knowing how to clean it, or not having the tools and supplies to do so - and rust and corrosion have done their thing - or build up of carbon or copper fouling? Muzzle condition - is it dinged or smooth? Firing pin tip - is it nicely rounded or are there chips missing? Firing pin main spring - is it shiny clean and oiled or rusted up dirty and grungy? Bolt face? Action ways? Clean or grungy inside the action? If you are considering to pay that price, then you should be able to check that stuff, or have the seller show you that stuff.
As mentioned above - "Pine Ridge", I think, was a made-in-China entry level scope sold by Cabela's for a while - so consider that about "bottom of the barrel" - although every so often one likely works well for a particular user. You made no mention of the ring and base system that attach that scope to the rifle - is kind of important - looks sort of like a Weaver "quad" ring and one piece base - are all the screws torqued to spec? Was Loctite or Threadlocker used on the screws that hold the base to the rifle - which kind? A 30-30 is usually considered sort of a 175 yard to 200 yard deer gun - certainly do not need a target quality scope for those maximum ranges, to shoot.
Are you getting the Owner's Manual that came with that rifle when it was new, or have you found it on-line - usually that manual contains a lot of pretty basic maintenance stuff, that the maker expected the owner to be able to do - usually how to remove the bolt - how to clean the insides of that gun and that bolt, etc. What parts of that rifle to lubricate - with what? And what parts NOT to lubricate. How to store it - how to get it ready to use it - how to clean it after using it and putting back into storage. If someone ignores all that for 20 or 25 years, then you get what you get, and THAT is what you are looking at to buy today.
I notice in your pictures that the hood is still around the front sight - do you see that within the scope view? That bothers some people. I also notice the elevator is missing from the rear sight - is that being included with the rifle? Probably no need to get overly wound up about scoping a 30-30 - it will not make the rifle shoot better - it might help you see and aim better - and you do not have to hit a particular hair on a deer to kill it - on a broadside deer, there is perhaps a 10" (25 cm) diameter "kill zone" - put a bullet through there and your deer is dead - was done for probably centuries with the iron sights up to 175 to 200 yards. Shoot enough and practice, so that you can do that - a not too bad standard would be a 6" (15 cm) diameter round thing - paper plate, black circle on target paper, 6" (15 cm) gong - can you put a hit / hole - anywhere in that - every shot - at the ranges that you expect to shoot a deer?
My own 30-30 is a made-in-1955 Winchester 94. I installed Williams aperture rear sight and taller front sight - my eyes getting old enough I could no longer see the barrel mounted rear sights well. I liked the idea of one hand carry with that little carbine - right hand around that action - I did not want to put a scope on it - would loose that "carry-ability", and no real reason for a scope for the ranges that the 30-30 would be used.