marlinguy
Frequent Elocutionist
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Ballards may be weaker, but they sure are neater!
Posts: 16408
Location: Oregon
Joined: Feb 2 nd, 2009
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Re: another bogus Ballard?
Reply #11 - Jun 4th, 2015 at 10:18pm
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It's a very early Marlin Ballard, and thus has several features found on Brown Mfg. Ballards, as John Marlin started out assembling Ballards from leftover Brown parts. The lever with a "return" on the end is early, as is the locating pin for that lever. Some early Marlin Ballards have both; while some have the lever (with or without hole) and some have the lever, but no pin in the frame. Some even have the hole in the frame for a pin, but no pin installed. The #1 Ballard all had round top receivers, and round barrels. The #1 1/2 had round barrels also, but octagon top receivers, and unlike the #1 which was cast; all #1 1/2 are forged receivers. The gun at auction is a #2, and also has the early style hammer and trigger, which were Brown items too. It has the deep crescent buttplate, but as Frank mentioned, the stock bolt is under the plate. My earliest Ballard is a #4 Perfection in serial #48x, and has the stock bolt under the buttplate. Often Marlin mixed the spare parts they got when they started production, so there's no cutoff date for certain things. I've seen much later guns have early Brown parts on them. If they found a box of parts, they simply used them up, without wanting to waste any usable parts. Which explains why the upside down stamped receiver got used also. Frank, I've never seen a pin in the frame that was "threaded"! All that I've observed were smooth. I'd like to see yours on your Ballard. Wonder if the threaded pin is original, or something added later? PS-The seller mentions the changeover from JM Marlin to Marlin Firearms Co. as 1876-1880, which is incorrect. JM Marlin was the company John Marlin started in 1870 to build handguns, and the change didn't happen until 1881 when he began making lever action repeaters. He incorporated at that point, and the company name changed to Marlin Firearms Co.
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