- Location
- Somewhere on the Hudson Bay Coast
I guess I haven't been paying attention as the .338 Marlin is news to me. Apparently it is based on a rimmed version of the .376 Styer, which is a bit of a head scratcher as there are other .30/06 capacity cartridges designed for short actions like the .284 Winchester, and you can add a rim to almost anything. They make a big deal about the advantages of .376 Styer's thick web, but that is lost on cartridges designed to function within the pressure limitations of a traditional lever action rifle. Perhaps the investment in .376 Styer tooling wasn't paying off due to the success of the .375 Ruger, and they needed to breath new life into that dead dog. Ballistically, the cartridge doesn't set the world on fire, although new cartridges with big hype do sell rifles for a while.
IMHO, a better idea is a 95 Marlin chambered for a cartridge that seats a .358 caliber bullet in a necked up .348 Winchester, with less taper, and a neck about 1.5 calibers long. The .358 has greater versatility thanks to a much broader range of bullet weights from 90 grs pistol bullets through to 300 grs rifle bullets. Because any given bullet weight in a larger caliber will produce higher velocities than the same weight of bullet in a smaller caliber when fired in a cartridge of similar capacity, a .348 or a .45/70 reconfigured to .358 would produce better ballistics across the board than the .338 (Styer) Marlin, without the necessity of reinventing the wheel.
IMHO, a better idea is a 95 Marlin chambered for a cartridge that seats a .358 caliber bullet in a necked up .348 Winchester, with less taper, and a neck about 1.5 calibers long. The .358 has greater versatility thanks to a much broader range of bullet weights from 90 grs pistol bullets through to 300 grs rifle bullets. Because any given bullet weight in a larger caliber will produce higher velocities than the same weight of bullet in a smaller caliber when fired in a cartridge of similar capacity, a .348 or a .45/70 reconfigured to .358 would produce better ballistics across the board than the .338 (Styer) Marlin, without the necessity of reinventing the wheel.