I think about replacing this with a 16.5" trapper model now and then, but can't make myself get rid of a JM stamped marlin. It is pretty handy, but if a sleek 1886 carries like a long slender sword, the BL carries like a chopping maul...
^ Great analogy! The 16.5-inch gun would be a sweetheart, but there is no way I will sell the 18.5 incher I have just to get one, and I'm not buying yet another to add to the list.
I have two .45-70's left, and just can't bring myself to sell either. The "best" one, in terms of practicality, is a JM-marked 1895SBL. Bought it slightly used at an outstanding price, from a guy who had just learned that he was terrified of recoil. It was the ugliest levergun I had ever seen...still is, IMHO...and I intended to try it out and quickly flip it. Still have it; absolutely one of the best-handling, best-shooting, most accurate and all-around most useful levers I have ever owned. I usually use it with a scout scope, and simply can't say enough good things about this rifle. If only it weren't so butt-ugly, I would probably be able to sell...
...the other gun, which is a Winchester-marked model 1886 (recent Miroku gun). I had owned a similar gun, an older Browning-marked gun, which I loved dearly...but the crescent buttplate bugged me. When plinking or shooting targets, it's easy to remember that the crescent is designed to be held out on top of the shoulder joint, rather than in the "pocket" which is typically the hold used on shotgun-style buttplates. Held properly, it's easy to shoot...but I had several instances of quick shots taken while hunting, when I instinctively held the butt in my shoulder pocket and didn't like the results. When I sold a bunch of guns, I let this one go for that single reason. But recently, I found the Winchester-marked gun, and it's a treat. Somebody...not Bubba, but an actual talented worker...replaced the crescent with a straight rubber pad, and managed to keep the length of pull correct. It's got that nasty tang safety, but came with a tang sight which mounts over top of the safety and almost completely covers it, but allows you to barely reach it in case the time ever comes that you think you need to engage it. Sounds goofy, but looks and works pretty slick. The rifle is a takedown, using the original style mechanism that involves unscrewing the magazine tube to remove the barrel. I like it! I can't shoot it quite as well as I can the SBL, but if it had a scope...which it never will...I don't think the accuracy would be significantly poorer than the Marlin. I can use the irons well enough for any hunting I intend to use it for, and dis-assembly/re-assembly usually brings it back to within about 1 MOA of where it started, so I'm happy with it.