which lever action rifle

frankbonaiuto

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Hi everyone hope all had great Christmas, I'd like to buy a lever rifle but there is just to many options, where do I start? There is no particular reason for it other than I don't have one yet. Fire away with your suggestions not looking to spend crazy money just want to add one.

Thanks

Frank
 
357 mag rifles are cheap to feed, but lack that thump. 45-70 has the thump, but pricy to shoot and hard to find reloading components today. Here comes the 44magnum to be the perfect inbetween. Can load them light or hot and a lever in 44magnum has been my favorite of all the choices. I have a Chiappa alaskan and love it aside from the non original look to it.
 
Consider a Henry in .22 perhaps a Golden Boy it is a nice and well-made lever rifle and affordable to enjoy.
 
357 mag rifles are cheap to feed, but lack that thump. 45-70 has the thump, but pricy to shoot and hard to find reloading components today. Here comes the 44magnum to be the perfect inbetween. Can load them light or hot and a lever in 44magnum has been my favorite of all the choices. I have a Chiappa alaskan and love it aside from the non original look to it.

Couldn’t have said it better. I find 44 mag is the best in-between and my go-to. From cowboy to full house, it makes a big hole. Reloading can be done quite economically, realizing your still shooting at least a 240 grain bullet and a good scoop of powder.
If you want to stretch the $/shooting, 357 mag is a good starter
 
I'd get a 45-70. You can buy light 405 grain Remington Cor-Lokts when you don't need the extra authority. Also super easy to reload for. I bought a nice Henry and never looked back.
 
Hard to tell ya which direction to go without caliber & intended purpose...

Cheap range gun, 22 lever like a Browning.

Hunting gun, hard to beat a 30-30 Winchester for light carrying & if you are going to scope it, grab a Marlin.

Like my Marlin 336 in 35 Rem...

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Heck, I just picked up a Chiappa Ridge Runner in 45-70 & set it up as a 'bear gun' with a flashlight & red dot.

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Which will be perfect over bait...

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The Winchester 94 in 30 30 has been doing it all for a long time.
Easy and affordable to get ammo, throw it on the Quad behind the truck seat and it will be ready to go when you need it.
 
I've got a 357, a 44 mag and a 45-70. Love the 357 for plinking with hard cast loads. I have 240 grain hard cast loads with trailboss for plinking with the 44 mag and hot 300 grain loads for hunting. The 45-70 is pretty versatile too with a lot of different bullet weights available.
You can do a lot of different things with leverguns and you just have to figure out what you want to use it for.
 
I have Henry 22 lever action, and I really love it.
The action is smooth, and it just feels good doing it. There's something about a lever action, it's a lot more fun than, say, a bolt.

In 22, the amo is so cheap that you can plink away and not worry, just have fun and enjoy yourself.

I like my henry because the build quality seems good to me, and I appreciate the history behind it.

It shot accurate right out of the box too.
 
You mentioned that you didn't have a particular goal in mind, for choosing a lever action. Whether: Hunting, target shooting, competition, etc. But might have some idea? That may help direct you toward a choice that best fits your needs.
 
I bought an old lever Winchester 303 Brit early last year, and got the lever bug. That thing has been awesome to shoot. I'm at the 300 m gong with open sights using it, and want to try and stretch that out a little further this year.

That led me to a Marlin 44 mag. Great fun toy, and then realized I did not want a wood stock on the 44, so sold the marling and found a Henry X model 44 lever. Added a 2-7x33 scope and she is ready for some bear work and range fun. I use the HP for hunting and the campro bullets for range fun. For what I use it for the X model with the molded stock is perfect, and I don't have to worry about a few dings on it. I know, its not wood, but I have enough of those, and may be looking at an Annie later this year to satisfy the beauty of a wood stock.

Have since purchased a 45-70 for my brother, and worked up a load for it before he gets its. Loaded up a nice stout 300 gr load for hunting use and again the campro's for range fun. While I know that you can load lighter for it, but why, its a thumper.
For me, the 44 does everything enough and have no desire to go up into the 45-70 thump. It is still cheaper to load the 44 than the 45-70.
 
If it is just for fun the Browning BL22 is a tone of fun, everyone in my house loves to shoot this 22. Second to that a M92 of what ever manufacture in 357/38 special is also a crao tone of fun.
 
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