I inherited a marlin 1894 built in the late 70s. It has the dreaded Marlin Jam. Can anyone recommend a good gunsmith in the Detroit Metro area?
I inherited a marlin 1894 built in the late 70s. It has the dreaded Marlin Jam. Can anyone recommend a good gunsmith in the Detroit Metro area?
You don't need a gunsmith to fix that. You can fix it yourself in about 30 minutes, without spending all the time with disassembly/reassembly (about $100 at a smith before you even start to address the carrier or the lever)
Which 1894 model? What caliber and bullet profile are you getting the "letting 2 in" jam with?
Sorry I didn't answer your question about a gunsmith in the metro area - it just isn't needed.
No suggestions on gunsmith, but here is a DIY video...
https://youtu.be/0CK_Hf-OJWo?si=VTsYkTRTQIf2qR5U
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If you don't want to tackle a fix yourself, give Doug Jones a call...248- 852-6490
He's in Rochester hills, near M-59 & Crooks rd.
2271 Star Ct, Rochester Hills, MI 48309
not certain, but don't think Doug will charge $100 for a repair, his prices are very reasonable.. ( ask him)
Thank you Master Chief and others for the advice. I may try to fix it myself and I’m grateful for a good gunsmith referral.
One quick FREE check before anything else...the forward screw in the trigger plate (in front of lever, barrel end) CAN work itself loose while shooting, if it wasn't fully tightened last time you cleaned it it WILL back out a small bit.
As little as ~35° loose (that's less than 1/8 of a turn) can cause the "Marlin jam". That equates to roughly 0.025" offset on the snail cam upward travel which affects carrier timing.
They are lever actions after all with fairly loose machining tolerances...don't gorilla fist them, but make them firm "tool tight".
Good luck! If you do decide to tackle it yourself, just make a new post in the DIY gunsmith section and we can help you out. There is a ton of knowledge here.
I've never heard anything negative about the smith recommended, so you've already got that in your pocket too.
.025” is getting close to RCH dimensions. Thank you for the advice sir
Ha! Everyone knows an RCH has two leading zeros - 0.0025 -, but it is finer than BCH - 0.0050. Mediterranean dimensions (BFCH) only have one - 0.025.
UPDATE - I think the root cause was loose screw forward of trigger plate. I tightened it about 1 full turn. Haven’t taken it to range to confirm yet however it is cycling correctly in my basement. I had the muzzle in a safe direction and finger off trigger but I hate cycling any gun with live ammo. Especially a lever. Thanks for the useful advice.