I bought my Marlin 336 in .30-30 used about 11/2 years ago. It was manufactured in 1976. I have never been happy with itÂ’s accuracy. Now IÂ’ll state right off that I realize this type of rifle, a carbine with a light weight barrel, is not a tack driver. I was quite aware that as the barrel heated up, I could expect the group size to increase.
But in forums like this, I often read reports of fine shooting with the Marlin rifles. Some time back on the old Marlin forum, they had a shooting contest where the contestants mailed in postcards of their groups.
I was amazed and perplexed. Some of those guys were getting almost MOA, and I could not equal even the weakest examples.
I tried deep cleaning a polishing the barrel with JB bore paste, different loads, no avail. The best I seemed able to do was a group in about oh, 25 sq inches. So when my friend and I sent other rifles out for a cryo-treat, this Marlin went also.
The groups did improve. I can now hit the 10 ring at 100yards several times in a string. Problem solved, right? Not quite. Now the Marlin shoots 3 -4 inches high on the first round, and then drops down and groups on subsequent shots.
IÂ’ve tried electronic cleaning of the bore. The front band was pulling the magazine tube toward the barrel, so IÂ’ve machined the front band to relieve about 70% of the stress there. Below is an example of the group with factory ammunition.
As you can see, the first shot is quite high. The picture shows Remington 150gr Core-Lokt. Winchester 150gr Power-Point doesnÂ’t jump quite as high, but the effect is the same. My reloads with 130gr Speer jump higher.
After the 1st shot, loads groups reasonably well whether it is 2, 4, or 6 more rounds.
As you can see in the photo below, the bore copper fouls quite extensively.
Those are actually the groves, not the lands. In bright light, there are as bright as a penny. And thatÂ’s after a half dozen patches with a name-brand copper remover!
The marred portion of the barrel near 12:00 was there when I bought the rifle. DonÂ’t know if the previous owner dropped the gun, or bumped a brick wall or what.
I donÂ’t think a 3 - 4 inch jump is acceptable, even for a 20" barrel.
The only thing that I can think of at this point is a rebarrel. At this point, IÂ’m open to suggestions.