20” brl and chamber it in 458lott. This way it is still possible to use the 458 winmag if possible. Cost of chambering is the same. Depending on your requirements, can get 250g Barnes on low side and what ever you desire for higher weight bullets. A good stock and recoil pad helps a lot when the rifle is lighter weight rifle
What I have is a long action with a magnum bolt face and a .458 barrel with a 1-18 twist
So once we boil off all the water, you have parts that, on the face, are designed for a 458 Win Mag. Straight off, I would ditch the idea of using 450 Marlin. You've got too much action for that short little cartridge. Same with the 458 American (damn near the same thing as the 450 Marlin but based on Win Mag brass).
Now, there's no reason that you couldn't use a 458 with 350 or 400gr bullets to hunt deer and moose. You could shoot Speer 350gr softpoints at 2200 all day long and it wouldn't wear you out and I certainly wouldn't feel bad about using that on either deer or moose, overkill though they might be. Then you have the option to step up to a hard charging 450gr or 500gr load if you get out after something really big.
I've got nothing against building a short 45 caliber in a handy little rifle, but this action probably isn't the best candidate for that.
So once we boil off all the water, you have parts that, on the face, are designed for a 458 Win Mag. Straight off, I would ditch the idea of using 450 Marlin. You've got too much action for that short little cartridge. Same with the 458 American (damn near the same thing as the 450 Marlin but based on Win Mag brass).
Now, there's no reason that you couldn't use a 458 with 350 or 400gr bullets to hunt deer and moose. You could shoot Speer 350gr softpoints at 2200 all day long and it wouldn't wear you out and I certainly wouldn't feel bad about using that on either deer or moose, overkill though they might be. Then you have the option to step up to a hard charging 450gr or 500gr load if you get out after something really big.
I've got nothing against building a short 45 caliber in a handy little rifle, but this action probably isn't the best candidate for that.
All reasonable points... but...
If you are specifically looking for heavier .45/70 performance specifically, but in a bolt action rifle, then the short .458's are an option. In my case, this is mostly a carry rifle while guiding for bears, I will likely shoot some of my own game with the rifle, but it will get carried a whole lot more than shot. The circumstances in which I will use it absolutely does not require .458 WM or Lott performance. I will have the rifle back at the end of this week or start of next week and will give it a good review and will post pics on this thread.
If he had a short action then I would 100% be onside with the shorter cartridge. But if he's got a Model 70 then the damned thing is the same size whether you're packing a 308 or 458 Lott so boxing the mag and putting a short cartridge in there seems silly to me. I suppose a person could go with a 458 American or 450 Marlin in the long action and have all the flexibility in the world to seat the bullets out longer, but bullets like the Speer 300, 350, and 400gr run anywhere from .810" to .970" so it's not like they have a ton of intrusion into the case...or shank to get inside the neck. Even with minimal seating depth of .4" inside the case you don't have an OAL over 2.5" so you just end up with a ton of real estate in teh magazine to deal with.
Now, if we were talking a little Model 7, a Model 600, or something crazy like a Mannlicher-Schönauer then, well, why not go short?
20” brl and chamber it in 458lott. This way it is still possible to use the 458 winmag if possible. Cost of chambering is the same. Depending on your requirements, can get 250g Barnes on low side and what ever you desire for higher weight bullets. A good stock and recoil pad helps a lot when the rifle is lighter weight rifle
I got my Ruger M77 Mark II Stainless .450 Marlin back, and it achieved what I was looking for, namely a handy, easy-carrying, mild(ish) bear thumper. The rifle is well balanced with the Bob Jury barrel cut to 20", the 12 twist is tighter than necessary but it is what I could get. The rifle came in at basically 9 pounds even, in the B&C stock and with three rounds loaded. The recoil is very pleasant, more of a push than a kick, with a pleasing mellow "boom." The scope is a Bushnell AR 1-6x24 Illuminated, I was looking for a quick acquisition optic, and this one is quite nice for the money. I did a somewhat rough zero at 50 yards and found the rifle very enjoyable to shoot. There was initially a little hitch in the feeding, not enough to jam up but irritating. The lip on the flat meplat on the Speer 350's was catching on the way up, so I turned them into RN's with some judicious filing and they fed and ejected perfectly there after. For SAG, I put out a box and quick stepped perpendicular while cycling and firing through a magazine and things went splendidly... no issues with the 2.700" loads in the long action. Mission accomplished... I saw 15 bears last night including one in my boat, we are fully underway and batting "1000" thus far.