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PBSmith
11-11-2018, 11:38 AM
If I read correctly, 1949 was the first year of production of the 336. I have such a rifle (F serial #)and it appears to have a one-piece firing pin.

Two questions:
1. Is this the way it was, or did someone switch in a one-piece before I got the rifle? I've seen early 336 rifles with parts from 36's that the factory apparently wanted to use up. My G-numbered 336 has the two-piece pin.

2. Is removing the one-piece pin as simple as drifting the rear pin out of the bolt? IF not where is the tutorial on this? Does it make any difference which direction that pin is drifted?

Thanks,
PBSmith.

Texas by God
11-11-2018, 11:52 AM
On my 36G (1964) it has the normal one piece firing pin with the transfer plunger between it and the hammer. The rear pin, flat tension spring, and transfer plunger must be removed first, then pry off the extractor to reveal the pin that holds the firing pin in. I drift the roll pins from bottom to top on the bolt but it probably doesn't matter. A roll pin punch is best.
I hope this helps.

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PBSmith
11-11-2018, 12:03 PM
Thanks for your reply Tex. Actually I don't want to remove this but I'm getting the same lightly dented primer and misfire problem that you reported, and I thought it would be a good idea to clean house. But I'm also using CCI primers (some quite old) and just noticed a couple of them had not been seated deeply enough. Thus several possible explanations for the misfires.

I'm somewhat confused about your "36G (1964)" rifle. Is that a Model 36? Weren't they discontinued after the 336 came out?

Texas by God
11-11-2018, 12:29 PM
Thanks for your reply Tex. Actually I don't want to remove this but I'm getting the same lightly dented primer and misfire problem that you reported, and I thought it would be a good idea to clean house. But I'm also using CCI primers (some quite old) and just noticed a couple of them had not been seated deeply enough. Thus several possible explanations for the misfires.

I'm somewhat confused about your "36G (1964)" rifle. Is that a Model 36? Weren't they discontinued after the 336 came out?I'm sorry, I should have been clearer. The 36G was the first Glenfield Marlin made. They only made 6000 in 1964-1965. It is a 2/3 mag pistol grip birch uncheckered stock variant of the 336. The barrel has a Cursive Marlin on it as well as Glenfield Model 36G. I hope my info is correct. I usually don't care for scopes on a lever action, but this one is the most accurate Marlin I've owned and that's a high bar.
Since my bolt/ firing pin strip and oil, I've had no misfires at all.

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PBSmith
11-11-2018, 02:32 PM
Thanks for the clarification. I'm glad you posted on that problem of misfires. I saved that informative thread and will be going back to it as I investigate my own situation. Just discovering via the web that this has been a common problem with 336's and that the causes can be manifold.

Right now I'm looking into the possibility that the primers weren't seated properly. Have experienced this with reloads in other calibers/guns. I don't have factory ammo to run through for a check like you did, but I'm reloading some fresh rounds, making sure about the primer seating.

Good shooting.
PBSmith

pietro
11-11-2018, 09:35 PM
.

If proper primer seating doesn't disappear your misfires, I would suggest removing the bolt from the receiver and power flushing the firing pin channel from the front.

https://shop.brownells.com/gun-cleaning-chemicals/solvents-degreasers/bore-solvents/powder-blast-sku100004401-30933-53635.aspx?cm_mmc=PPC-_-Itwine-_-Google-_-100-004-401&gclid=EAIaIQobChMIv8rpodvN3gIVisVkCh3J6Qm1EAQYCCAB EgLtRfD_BwE


https://www.brownells.com/userdocs/products/p_100004401_1.jpg

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PBSmith
11-13-2018, 10:29 PM
Thanks for that suggestion.