Who is making a 350L lever gun?I’ve been wanting a 357 maximum in ruger Blackhawk for a while now. My son just got a levper action in 350 legend. Can any tell me if there’s any difference between the 2. Did the 357 maximum get renamed 350 legend?
I shot one in IHMSA back in the day also with jacketed .35 caliber rifle bullets also. I am old so my memory is a little rusty but I seem to remember they cut the strap to a certain depth and then stopped. You could barely see mine. I think Ruger's problem was the gap was to wide. The Dan Wesson didn't have that problem. It had a gap under .002" . My .357 came with a feeler gauge to allow for readjustment if needed or when switching to a different barrel length. Wish I never sold it.I used my max in IHMSA silhouette competition extensively during the mid to late 1980's when I was IHMSA Michigan State Director. I used a 200gr. spire point rifle bullet at 1300fps. with great success and very little top strap flame cutting.
Before you reload those cases measure the length. I have some of those and they are shorter than the Max case. Don't know if they were made that way or someone cut them down to get the cannelure grove in the right place for 180 grain bullets.I have a Dan Wesson 8" revolver in .357 Maximum with an unused spare barrel. How old is it? Well I imported it to the UK before I moved to the US in the mid-80s. We in the ILRPSA (International Long Range Pistol Shooting Assoc -- a UK body) found them very effective and accurate. Hornady 200 grainers and H4227 were the components of choice back then, although the options would be much wider today. *If* I recall correctly the pistols came with a 0.002" feeler gauge to set the barrel, not the larger (0.006"?) that DW typically used. It is a very accurate pistol, I doubt I have shot it in 25+ years. Still have IHMSA headstamped plated cases though, dies, and I am pretty sure some Remington factory ammo, but I'd have to dig deep top find them.
I guess it depends on which levergun you're starting with. I remember hearing/reading about a 357 Max conversion on a short action 1894 Marlin. The lever throw had to be lengthened considerably so the bolt cleared the cartridge, custom carrier installed, etc. Even then, it wasn't a reliable feed according to the owner. Making guns, like a model 92, meant to feed 1.6 inch cartidges feed nearly 2 inch ones is basically not worth the effort.At the time there was demand to convert the Marlin rifle, originally chambered in 357 mag, to the maximum cartridge. Many said the pressures were too high forgetting that the same rifle had been chambered in centrifuge rifle cartridges. Lot of people tried and many ruined rifles were created. But the gunsmiths who knew what they were doing created a rifle that cycled like clock work. I was late to that conversion and did mine about 10 years ago. The conversion is more accurate than it was in 357 mag. . .and the rifle still cycles and fires the 38 special and the 357 Mag.