If you go .45-70 you will have to bedliner the stock. The .45-70 doesn't kill properly without a few coats of bedliner.
how would you know? you've never owned a Marlin long enough to hunt with it
If you go .45-70 you will have to bedliner the stock. The .45-70 doesn't kill properly without a few coats of bedliner.
Let me weigh in on the question of the rifled slug gun vs the 45/70.
I have a siamese mauser, and I load it in the range of 4000 ftlbs energy at the muzzle, I do not think your slug gun is going to exceed 2000, or if it does, not by much. The 45 is a rifle, and you can count on it as far as you want, if you can correct for height, I would have no hesitation shooting anything with it at 300 yards if I knew how far to hold over, the slug gun, however, shoots slugs that are even ballistically worse than a 45 bullet, and in the same weight range. I think a deer would be exceptionally unlucky to be hit by a slug at 300 yards. I know he would if I were shooting.
As a weapon to carry for your safety, the slug gun is excellent. I know a few guys who cruise timber and carry them, and they have the advantage of being able to put shot loads in them also, as most things find 00 Buck discourging. There are lots of good choices for a brush gun. A good friend shoots 220 grain 30 cal bullets at about 2250 fps from No.4 Lee Enfield. He can put 10 of these in the magazine, and I have seen him shoot 4 inch groups at 100 yards. This rifle is all you need at 150 yards to shoot anything.
Al
how would you know? you've never owned a Marlin long enough to hunt with it




























