.450 Marlin | ||
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.450 Marlin, left and .458 Winchester Magnum, right |
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Type | Rifle | |
Place of origin | United States | |
Production history | ||
Designer | Hornady and Marlin Firearms | |
Designed | 2000 | |
Manufacturer | Hornady | |
Produced | 2000-Present.[1] | |
Specifications | ||
Parent case | .458x2 American | |
Bullet diameter | .458 in (11.6 mm) | |
Base diameter | .503 in (12.8 mm) | |
Rim diameter | .528 in (13.4 mm) | |
Case length | 2.10 in (53 mm) | |
Overall length | 2.55 in (65 mm) | |
Ballistic performance | ||
Bullet weight/type | Velocity | Energy |
430 gr (28 g) LBT-LFN (Lead Long Flat Nose) | 1,900 ft/s (580 m/s) | 3,446 ft·lbf (4,672 J) |
405 gr (26.2 g) JFN (Copper Jacketed Flat Nose) | 1,975 ft/s (602 m/s) | 3,507 ft·lbf (4,755 J) |
350 gr (23 g) JFN | 2,100 ft/s (640 m/s) | 3,427 ft·lbf (4,646 J) |
325 gr (21.1 g) FTX (Hornady Flex Tip Expanding LEVERevolution) | 2,225 ft/s (678 m/s) | 3,572 ft·lbf (4,843 J) |
Test barrel length: unknown Source(s): Buffalo Bore Ammunition,[2] Hornady Ammunition,[3] |
The .450 Marlin is a firearms cartridge designed as a modernized equivalent to the venerable .45-70 lever-action cartridge. It was designed by a joint team of Marlin and Hornady engineers headed by Hornady's Mitch Mittelstaedt,[4] and was released in 2000, with cartridges manufactured by Hornady and rifles manufactured by Marlin, mainly the Model 1895M levergun. The Browning BLR is also now available in .450 Marlin chambering.
While ballistically similar to the .45-70, the .450 Marlin was not developed from the .45-70. Rather, the .450 Marlin was developed from the wildcat .458x2 American, which was based on the .458 Winchester Magnum.[5] This places the .450 Marlin in the .458 Winchester family of cartridges, though it is more easily understood as a "modernized" .45-70.
The belt has been modified to prevent it from chambering in smaller-bore 7mm Magnum or .338 Magnum rifles.[6] The .45-70 and .450 Marlin cannot be cross-chambered, but rifles chambered for the .458x2 can be modified to fire the .450 Marlin.[7]
Visually, the case resembles that of the .458 Winchester Magnum with a wider belt.[8] The cartridge is most useful for hunting big game at short ranges, being accurate at ranges of 150 to 175 yards (140 to 160 m).[5]