New toy! Marlin model 60

Discussion in 'Firearms' started by tedrow42, Jan 29, 2015.


  1. tedrow42

    tedrow42 Monkey+

    So a wile back i asked about the Savage and got some good info. Sadly i missed out on it. For those that where interested i found a Marlin 60 the guy said buy the number it should be around an 85 model. Looks good i paid 200 for it which seemed fair by what i seen online. The gf picked it up for me today and I will post pics when i get home and get my hands on it :)

    From Marlin's site:
    [​IMG]
     
    Last edited by a moderator: Jan 29, 2015
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  2. Dunerunner

    Dunerunner Brewery Monkey Moderator

    The Marlin 60 is a fine semi-auto .22 rifle and a great shooter... Congrats!
     
  3. tedrow42

    tedrow42 Monkey+

    Thank you @Dunerunner now the trick will be feeding it! my area is dry i found some on arms list but gotta have it shipped its stil cheaper than online wich i realy dont want to do. let me adjust my tinfoil hat... ok, online ammo and even buying guns from a gun shop im nervous about. i dont want to be on the list when they come to take them
     
  4. Dunerunner

    Dunerunner Brewery Monkey Moderator

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  5. tedrow42

    tedrow42 Monkey+

    @Dunerunner check our armslist.com ppl selling their surpluss ammo at .10 a roumd or less just gotta look around. im having 2500 of those thunderbolt for 250 plus what ever fedex charges. great deals on that site its kinda like graigslist for guns i love it!
     
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  6. Brokor

    Brokor Live Free or Cry Moderator Site Supporter+++ Founding Member

    I like the design, looks rugged enough. Lots of them selling for around $150, not bad for a newer style semi-auto.

    Check this baby out. It's a Mossberg 151k I picked up for less than $100 (all the .22's I buy are not more than $150) I ordered the original paperwork for it and made a modern .pdf manual for it, too. This rifle is the most rugged semi auto I have ever owned and I can fire it for hundreds of rounds and it will just keep pumping them out.

    DSC00090.JPG
     
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  7. kckndrgn

    kckndrgn Monkey+++ Moderator Emeritus Founding Member

    Congrats on the new toy, er firearm!

    22lr can be found, and depending on what you want to pay for it, is still available. My last purchase was from BassPro Shops, online but picked up in the store. I know I'm already on some lists, so why not make it interesting :)
    I used my BPS rewards points and got the cost per round down to around .03/rnd, normal price was .05 per round for 1400 rounds.
     
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  8. Pax Mentis

    Pax Mentis Philosopher King |RIP 11-4-2017

    The Model 60 is my second favorite plinker...after the 10/22.
     
  9. azrancher

    azrancher Monkey +++

    Sounds like a strawman sale to me... oh wait, this was probably a face to face transaction, perfectly legal until Hillary says differently.
     
  10. azrancher

    azrancher Monkey +++

    I actually had my wife do a straw man buy for me thru Big 5 Sporting Goods, I had them call me when a Ruger 10/22 came back into stock (shortly after Sandy Hook), they did several months later. I told the girl that called that I would have to have my wife pick it up as I was recovering from ACL surgery. The girl said ok sure....
     
  11. tedrow42

    tedrow42 Monkey+

    It was face to face so we are good and the next cheapest 22 i could find was crap, the guy said. Must be few and far between in West KY. And that's a sweet gun @Brokor
     
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  12. kellory

    kellory An unemployed Jester, is nobody's fool. Banned

    Oh, I don't know... I kinda like mine;)[​IMG] this is with the original scope. It has since been replaced with 30mm variable zoom scope. Glenfield model 60.
     
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  13. melbo

    melbo Hunter Gatherer Administrator Founding Member

    The 60 is such a classic - adding a little wiki to the thread:

    The Marlin Model 60, also known as the Marlin Glenfield Model 60, is a semi-automatic rifle that fires the .22 LR rimfire cartridge. Produced by the Remington Arms of Mayfield, Kentucky formally by Marlin Firearms Company of North Haven, Connecticut, it has been in continuous production since 1960 and the company claims it is the most popular of its kind in the world.[2] Major features include a micro-groove barrel, a cross-bolt safety, hardwood stock with Monte Carlo comb, and brass inner magazine tube.


    History
    The Marlin Model 99 was developed in 1959 by Ewald Nichol. Internally, it was essentially what would become the Model 60 in 1960. However, major differences were visible from the exterior. The Model 99 featured a walnut stock, and the receiver, instead of being grooved for tip-off scope mounts like the Model 60 would be, was factory-tapped to accept screw-on scope mounts. The Model 99 was offered from 1959 through 1961, and a lower priced version, Model 99G, was offered under Marlin's Glenfield line.

    The Marlin Model 60 was developed in 1960 from the Model 99 design. The primary difference was that the stock was made of birch instead of walnut to reduce the recurring production costs for the more expensive wood. Marlin also moved away from their practice of using steel inner tubes with their tubular magazine. They moved back to brass inner tubes as other companies had done. This, instead of the steel tubes often seen on earlier Marlin .22 rifles, completely eliminated the rust problems that the all-steel tubular magazines had experienced which helped make the inexpensive Marlin rifle as durable as more expensive .22 caliber rifles. The Model 60 additionally featured a 16-groove rifled barrel, utilizing Marlin's trademarked Micro-Groove rifling technology, which had been developed in 1953. This rifling, with its precision-crowned muzzle, gave the Model 60 an inherent, enhanced accuracy over competing rifles, which used traditional deep grooved rifling, because the bullet was not as severely deformed while traveling down the barrel, and downrange.

    The Model 60 has a manual "fully open" bolt hold position, activated by pushing the charging handle inwards towards the gun when it is in the fully retracted, open breech position. To close the bolt with the manual bolt hold-open engaged, the charging handle must be pulled out, away from the gun, before the bolt will go forward. Since 1985, the Model 60 has also included a patented automatic "last-shot" bolt hold-open. This latter feature is a safety feature that locks the bolt half-way open after the last cartridge is fired, thereby allowing the safe inspection of the now-open action. This also notifies the user when the gun is empty.

    During the late-1980s, the capacity of the rifle was reduced to a 15 round maximum limit, to meet New Jersey's firearms law for semi-automatic assault weapons. For a few years in the mid-1980s the Model 60 rifles had both the "last shot hold open" feature and also held 18 rounds in the tube magazine. Those rifles with those two features are among the most sought after Model 60s. The redesigned magazine tube was visibly shorter than the barrel, which is how rifles from this period can be easily identified. Then, in the early 2000s the length of the barrel was reduced from 22 to 19 inches (559 to 483 mm), to match the length of the reduced length magazine. This had the effect of reducing the length of the rifle from 40.5 to 37.5 inches (1029 to 953 mm). (The photo above is of the 40.5 inch (1029 mm) version, the rifle having been manufactured in 1982.) Non-removable tubular magazine-fed rifles were never subject to the 10 round limit of the Federal Assault Weapons Ban. Marlin also manufactured models for export, which had various capacities to comply with foreign firearms regulations.

    Despite slight design changes since 1960, there is general backwards compatibility of nearly all internal parts. Some notable parts that are year-specific are the feed throat mechanisms, magazine tubes, firing pins, and hammers.

    Features
    Two Marlin Model 60s. Top: older 18 round model. Bottom: 15-round model with aftermarket scope (and magazine tube that is visibly shorter than the barrel). Note: the bolt stays open on the 15-round model after the last round is fired, but does not on the 18-round model. The 15 round model has a third screw slightly behind the trigger guard to reinforce the stock, which the old model lacks. There are a few 1985 models that were a mixture of both, 22" barrel, 18 round capacity, last round bolt hold open feature and the third reinforcing screw. Different wood is used for the stock itself.

    The action design is a self-loading, straight blowback operation, with right-side ejection. The receiver top has a serrated, non-glare finish. The receiver is held in the stock by front and rear machine screws through forearm and the trigger guard respectively (later models add a wood screw behind the trigger guard to reinforce the wrist of the stock). The receiver is grooved for a scope mount. For use without a scope, the barrel features an adjustable open rear sight and a ramp front sight. The charging handle is used to load the first round from the magazine and can be retracted and pushed in as a manual bolt hold-open feature. Current model has an automatic "last-shot" bolt hold-open device with an external lever in the front of the trigger guard to release the bolt. Earliest Model 60s did not have a bolt hold-open; first the manual, then in the mid-1980s the automatic "last shot" hold-open were added. The rifle has an easily accessible cross-bolt safety located above the trigger. When disassembled, the trigger guard with trigger and safety remains in the stock.

    Marlin uses their proprietary Micro-Groove rifling in the Model 60. The twist rate is 1:16 inches, right-hand. Micro-Groove rifling uses 16 small lands and grooves rather than 4, 6 or 8 deeper grooves used in most rifles. This increases the accuracy of the rifle by lessening deformation of fired bullets traveling down the barrel. Although the Model 60 is one of the least expensive .22 semi-automatic rifles sold, it has the reputation of being one of the most accurate rifles out of the box, with no modifications necessary.[citation needed]

    Unlike some competing .22 semi-automatic rifles, such as the Ruger 10/22, there are relatively few aftermarket accessories sold for the utilitarian Model 60. Despite this, it has been sold in over thirty-five variants, and is one of the fastest-selling rifles ever.[3]

    While earlier .22 semi-automatic rifles were often designed to function with .22 Short, .22 Long and .22 Long Rifle interchangeably, the Model 60 is optimized for the .22 Long Rifle cartridge only.

    Uses
    The Model 60 is well-suited for small-game hunting and vermin control, as well as for serious but low-cost target practice while preparing for hunting with larger rifles. The relatively large ammunition capacity is adequate for casual recreational target shooting ("plinking"), plus the low price and ease of handling makes it well-suited as a first rifle by young hunters just learning to use a semi-automatic rifle.

    Versions and year of manufacture
    The Model 60 is currently available in 9 distinct versions:

    • Model 60, the basic rifle (shown in picture)

    • Model 60C, the basic rifle in a camouflage version

    • Model 60SN, the basic rifle with a black fiberglass stock

    • Model 60SB, the rifle in a weather-proof stainless steel version

    • Model 60DL, the basic rifle in a Monte Carlo walnut stock

    • Model 60SS, the rifle in a nickel-plated, stainless steel version with a grey/black laminate stock

    • Model 60SSK, the rifle in a nickel-plated, stainless steel version, with black fiberglass stock

    • Model 60S-CF, the rifle in a nickel-plated, stainless steel version, with a black carbon-fiber-patterned stock

    • Model 60DLX, the newest Marlin 60, celebrating the 50th anniversary of the Model 60. Has a premium walnut stock and gold fill on the roll marks, otherwise same as base model.[4]
    Historically, there were also other versions that were sold:

    • Marlin Model 99 and 99DL - this was the first version of the Model 60, offered in a walnut stock, 1959 to 1961

    • Marlin 99G - Very similar to the 60

    • Model 99M1 - styled to resemble the US Army M1 carbine, with eighteen inch barrel, handguard, barrel band, nine shot magazine even with the end of the stock, and receiver sight mounted on the scope grooves.

    • Model 989M2 - styled like the 99M1, but with a box magazine.

    • Glenfield Model 99G - precursor of the Model 60G.

    • Glenfield Model 60G - this was the name used on Marlin-made Model 60 guns intended for sale to mass-merchandisers, 1960 to 1965, with a birch stock instead of walnut

    • Glenfield Model 60 - one of the Model 60 versions manufactured from 1966 to 1982

    • Glenfield Model 65 - manufactured in 1968; it was essentially identical to the Model 60 with the exception of a brass exterior magazine tube; it was made for Oklahoma Tire & Supply Co.

    • Glenfield Model 75 - Carbine version. Shorter 16" barrel and 9 shot mag tube. No bolt release lever in trigger guard. Supplied with sling swivels.

    • Glenfield Model 75C - carbine version, same as the Glenfield Model 75 but the 75C has a 14+1 capacity.

    • Marlin Model 120 "Revelation" - Manufactured for Western Auto Supply in the early 1960s, had a brass dot front sight instead of the hood sight, and the barrel is stamped WESTERN AUTO SUPPLY CO.

    • Marlin Model 600 - Made specially for Big 5 Sporting Goods between 1986 and 1989. This model is very rare because of the short production run, and little info is known. Came with a supremely durable gold-plated metal trigger instead of the standard polymer trigger, and a stainless steel breech bolt in lieu of the blue steel breech bolt on the Model 60.

    • Model 60SSBL, the nickel-plated, stainless steel version of the M60 had a blue/grey laminate stock and was sold exclusively at Cabela's.
    Other private-label versions were manufactured for Montgomery Ward, Coast to Coast Stores, and Cotter & Company.
     
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  14. tedrow42

    tedrow42 Monkey+

    from what the guy said its 22" barel 18round tube and lock back i know it locks back cuz i thought i broke it lol and thanks for the positive feed back
     
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