Ruger just announce they are coming out with the 44 mag in the 94. Yes to answer your question they finally changed the rifling twist to 1 in 20!!!!
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Ruger just announce they are coming out with the 44 mag in the 94. Yes to answer your question they finally changed the rifling twist to 1 in 20!!!!
Just maybe they will respond also with a 44 WCF.
Thankfully, Ruger/Marlin will ignore silly stuff like cartridges that are difficult to purchase and focus on market success.
I want them to succeed.
i dont get it, The 1894s in 44 mag are sought after but not as much as the 357/38 model 1894s. How did they miss that in releasing the 44 mag model first??
While I aplaud their quest to do away with the 1:38 twist, I would do a little further research.
First, I'd say more than half the .44 Mag shooters will want to use a 429421 bullet in it to match the M29 or SBH they have.
I paid for my education by rebarrelig a M1894 .44 with a 1:20 some years ago. It shot 300 grain bullets really nice but not the lighter 421s.
Felix and I worked on this project one whole winter by e-mail back and forth and finally figured this was not the solution if you wanted an all around .44 Magnum carbine.
Felix had a Ruger with a 1:26 twist and it did fine. My Marlin didn't despite the fact that it wore a Douglas 1:20 twist. I junked that project and sulked. Then Winchester brought out the Legacy with a 1:26 and it would shoot both the 250 and 300 grain with a 1:26 twist in the one I had. Then the lawyers interceeded and put their hokey safety linkage in and it would missfire a lot so it left the stable.
Our calculations indicated that a 1:25 3/4 twist was perfect.
So, were I those boys, I'd look close at that. The .444 shoots well with a 1:20 but we're talking heavy bullets here. Mine didn't shoot lighter bullets worth beans.
I'm betting that a bunch of shooters will want to shoot 250s and surge to 300 grainers occasionally for special hunts.
Now, I'm just an ignorant red neck and what do I know? Far be it for me to tell the experts what's right and wrong./beagle
It's just your particular barrel that didn't do good with the 1 in 20 twist. This whole twist business is overrated. My 3 screw Ruger Blackhawk shoots 200 grain SWC's like a match 1911, but it doesn't with the 255 grain bullets. I have an early Marlin Cowboy in 45 Colt. Very very accurate to 100 yards then it falls on it's face. My 16 inch barreled Winchester 94 with the faster twist blows the doors off the Marlin. Listen to this at 200 to 300 yards with 255 grain SWC's the Marlin would barely be able to hit a man, but yet the Winchester Trapper puts them right in it. When Ruger gets going good on the Marlin I might very well get rid of that 1 and 38 twist barrel on the Marlin and have them put the new faster twist barrel on it. Am I the only member on this forum that didn't get brainwashed by someone about faster twists?
You guys seem to think the market is reloaders and casters. I know about 40 people that hunt deer and bear. None cast and none reload.
I think they did it intentionally to hold down the demand and avoid upsetting all the people who want a new .357 1894, and they want it now!
Remember the howls of outrage over long waits and the scalpers' prices when the first 1895s came trickling out of the factory? Imagine what it would like if they announced the .357 model first.
Now that I think about it, they should have made the first run in .41 Magnum. :twisted:
Me, I'm going to patiently wait for the .357 stainless, threaded muzzle, Picatinny-railed version.
My brother has a Henry 44mag with a 1/20 twist. It shoots standard semi jacket 240's VERY well. I know this is a cast boolit forum, but rifle manufacturers can't design a firearm with reloaders in mind.
I don’t know why but the Remlins came out in the same sequence, I believe.
Just hope they do not copy those SBH barrels that were .432, been there done that.
Ruger has some smart people working for them. They saw the light on the "old" rifling twist Marlin had been using. Did you ever wonder why Luger had a 9 something twist? It wasn't until the American's started making 9x19mm pistols that they upped it to 16.
This is my experience too, however very few of these guys (at least around here) are going to buy a $1000 lever action. Nearly all will go with one of the various sub-MOA cheap bolt actions available today. Someone buying an expensive lever action is much more likely to reload and cast then the average Axis/American/Compass purchaser.
The new 1894's in .44 mag or out now ,, they're Carbines. There is a video on You Tube buy some guy who got one and reviewed it . I couldn't stand listening to him. Limited Availability. They look just like the new 336's.
I talked to a friend who's got one to write up , He said it was the best Marlin he'd ever seen, and he actually knows what he's talking about. Supposed to be @ $1300. I want to see if they did my Chamber Mod? Pretty sure they did.
Next ones will be .38/.357 then .45 LC. others may come down the road but Ruger is actually in business to make money, and they have a pretty good idea what sells I want an 1894 CB20 in .44 mag. The big distributors will order what they want and since they order 500+ at a time Ruger will make them. They have a pretty good Idea of what sells too, so that will drive production.
Randy
Straight wall case requirements in a bunch of states for deer hunting. That plus the deer season is not far away in some of those states. I would have done the same thing to get these new rifles into the hands of whitetail hunters. 357 1894's are a sure seller for sure, but a lot of states have a minimum requirement for energy I am told.
I own a Win 94 Legacy, 24" bbl, 1/20 twist. Bought it new right after they came out back in the late 1990's. It shoots the Lee 310 gr, 240,250, 260 Lyman, & a 280gr NOE I cast from scrap WW's. Delivers excellent accuracy with all weights. Haven't tried 220gr.