i have one thats about 90-95% bought it off a table at a show probably 20 years or so now a buddy of mine who has gone to the happy hunting ground was there with me he pushed me into buying it the rifle and 8 boxes of ammo $400 out the door lol i thought i paid to much (4 boxes of 250gr and 4 boxes of 200 gr (the winchester white box big bore 94 ) to this day i have yet to shoot it i have alot of 35rem guns and a couple of 444 outfitters so there has been no need for it really...... but cant sell it steve would kill me from the grave so i take it out clean it and think about old memories they are blue wood and steel but they do make some memories
Surely no expert here, but when I began paying attention to the .375 chambering to add to my collection in the "Marlin safety era. That as my primary criteria was non-cross-bolt safety! My belief most folks would pay a premium for omission of that feature! Mine, pix below purchased used, SN places in 1980 and Sporting Carbine Config. Would have preferred something like a Texan straight grip Carbine but never saw any 'pre-Safety' with anything other than my SC config. Pix below! Best! John
I assume that you reload. If not, leave it alone. Even then components will be scarce and expensive. Try Hawk for bullets. A tried and failed cartridge (commercially) but still a good deer gun. I had one in Winchester Big Bore XTR but sold it due to needing a scoped rifle. It is one in the group of "brush guns" that continue to hold on with hunters... 356 Win, 444, 358 Win, 38-55, 45-70. I am currently looking for a 444. My biggest point is that at least bullets are more available for the 444 Marlin. But I have to admit that I also shoot original Springfield Trapdoor carbine and a Sharps carbine. Both require soft cast bullets and loads to replicate black powder. WHile the 45-70 brass is easy to find, the 50-70 brass for the Sharps was more challenging. You will face the same thing with a 375 Win. But once you have 100 or so you are good to go for a long time.
Surely no expert here, but when I began paying attention to the .375 chambering to add to my collection in the "Marlin safety era. That as my primary criteria was non-cross-bolt safety! My belief most folks would pay a premium for omission of that feature! Mine, pix below purchased used, SN places in 1980 and Sporting Carbine Config. Would have preferred something like a Texan straight grip Carbine but never saw any 'pre-Safety' with anything other than my SC config. Pix below! Best! John
Model 375's came one way.
America is (supposed to be) a Republic, NOT a democracy. Learn the difference, help end the lie. Fear a government that fears your guns.
My 375 is a Win 94. I have enough 375 brass for what I need for jacketed bullets. I have more made from 30-30 brass and for use with cast bullets. I suspect that most of my shooting will be with cast bullets.
You can buy cast for a lot less than jacketed at any rate. Great for practice.
I prefer classic. Semper Fi I used to run with the hare. Now I'm envious of the tortoise and I do my own stunts but rarely intentionally