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1970-70. 1971-71. 1972-72. Starting in 1973, the year of manufacture maybe determined by subtracting the first two digits of the serial number from 100: Example: SN 2512345 would have been made in 1975 [100 - 25 = 75] and SN 94365295 would have been made in 2006 [ 100 - 94 = 06 (2006) ]. For Marlin Rimfire Rifles [non-serialized]:
Remington/Marlin serial number information. by Regnier (gunrunner) » Sun Jul 02, 2017 3:58 pm. Remington/Marlin date of manufacturing code; Look for two letters on the side of the barrel. The code to decipher is as follows: Month date code: January - B February - L March - A April - C May - K June - P. July - O August - D September - D October ...
The serial number of your 39-A will begin with the letter "E". That indicates that your rifle was made in 1948. It will have the early, Ballard style rifling instead of the patented Micro-Groove rifling that came along later. Due to the increasing cost of ammunition, there will be no warning shot!
The Marlin Firearms Corporation that came into business in 1921 changed the model marking so to make a "new" model under their name. You would need to get the serial number to estimate the year your rifle was made. ="mh53". I have a Model 24 1908 22SL-LR,Model 37...behind the trigger guard on stock it says "228-1".
Firearm serial numbers were date coded by a prefix within the s/n, as signified below. For example a Marlin model 39A with a serial number of N1255X would have been made in 1955. while a 1894 in 44 magnum with a serial number of 2510509X, would have equated to 1975. LEVER ACTIONS. ALL FIREARMS.
Thanks ! 1-800-544-8892 The fella that answered was real polite and didn't come off as if he were being pestered. I told him it was a Marlin Camp 9, and he asked for the serial number. I told him what it was and he said: "It is one of the last to have been made before they were discontinued in 2000. Hence, he said mine was made in 2000.
Marlin used the two digits of the year indicating the year (in your case, 71 for 1971) beginning in 1969, and discontinued that method after 1972. Dealers complained that Marlin was "dating" the inventory, so Marlin changed to subtracting the first two digits of the serial number from 100 in 1973.
The guns made during the war will have the letter A, B, C or D prefix, and the serial number will be located up by the forearm, such as the Marlin Firearms Company did prior to 1916. These guns are all marked "Model 1893" (except of course the Models 1895, '94, '92 and '97). After WW I ended and the new Marlin Firearms Corporation took over ...
One 39M. One 1897 Cowboy. One 1897T. One 39 TDS. On this recent 39A I plan on installing a vintage all steel receiver sight, probably a Redfield #75 and base, or a Lyman. I will also install a globe front sight with interchangable posts. In addition I own several Marlin 1894's, 1895's and 336's and they are. Three 1894 .357 pre-safety models.
I got an email from a guy who said the MR is Marlin Remington/and the 2 most likely signifies the year and the 2nd number most likely signifies the month...or vice versa...of manufacture. I got the rifle in Sept. 2012 so the 2 probably means 2012. The whole sequence may show what number in the lot mine was built. The whole number is MR2xxxxC.