

Marlin 1894 327 Federal / 32 H&R Pistol Caliber Carbine
At the request of a few customers, we've expanded our Marlin 1894 pistol caliber carbine conversions to include the 327 Federal / 32 H&R. The simplest of conversions to do, the 327 Federal / 32 H&R can be done using your current Marlin 1894 rifle barrel OR a Douglas match-grade barrel. A Marlin 1894CL conversion rifle to 327 Federal with a 16.5" barrel and mag tube will hold 7 rounds. - BARREL AND MAG TUBE SHORTENED (YOUR CHOICE 21" DOWN TO 16.5") - BARREL CHAMBERED TO 327 FE


What is a Marlin 1894 short stroke conversion?
In the world of tomorrow, we antiquated humans will no longer have to cycle our antiquated lever guns. A robot will do it for us, and much faster—snickity snack—right before a look of amusement passes across its titanium alloy face and it discards the silly relic onto a pile of other rifles that it deems inedible, because lever guns aren’t made of aluminum and polymer. Too bad, it will think. Because robots love aluminum and polymer. But perhaps it will call up some lonesome


Marlin 1894 Pistol Caliber Carbine Conversions (10MM, 40S&W, 45ACP, 357SIG)
Marlin’s pistol caliber carbine, the 1894, has always been a great seller. It was introduced in 1894, dropped from the lineup many years later, then re-introduced in the 1970s because of popular demand. Back in the day, it was common for a cowboy to have his wheelgun and his rifle chambered in the same cartridge for practical reasons: the revolver offered five quick shots if things got up close and personal, while the rifle offered extended range and increased accuracy. Both