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So, what's the scoop on them? I'm talking about the older "real" JM Model 60's. These haven't attained rock star status like the 39 and there are a bunch on gunbroker in good shape for well under $200.

Was the stock actual walnut or was there a time they were walnut and they went to hardwood?

How is the reliability? I had a Marlin 99-M1 back in the 1960's that was dressed up like an M1 carbine and it was a jam-a-matic. Plus the aluminum receiver wouldn't hold the scope tip off rings, no matter how I tightened them they kept sliding. Has anybody had that problem with them?

Basically looking for a longer barreled semi-auto than a Ruger and there aren't a lot out there except the older 22" barreled Marlins and some scarce Lipsey's "walmart special" models of a 10/22, which are also twice as much as the M60 when you can even find them.
Fired about two truckloads of ammo through mine!

It's not a walnut stock I don't think, would have been new in the early 80's.

Not bench rest accuracy but kept the squirrel population at bay!

Mike
Model 60 started out as a Glenfield model which was Marlins economy line. They dropped the Glenfield moniker sometime in the 80's and it became just the Marlin 60. The 60 always had birch stocks. More recently they switched to laminated birch. There were Walnut stocked Marlins that were essentially identical but with Walnut stocks and upgraded sights. Those would have been the models 99C and 990 if memory serves. I have a model 60 that is very accurate for an inexpensive semi and dead reliable when fed quality high velocity ammunition.
I picked up a NIB Model 60 JM Marlin Carbine with the rare 16" barrel about 10 years ago on GunBroker for $150. At that time it was a little high at that price, but I had owned one as a kid, that I gave to my little brother way back in the early 1970's, and wanted a new one just because. And ever one I ever seen has had the hardwood stock.

I've owned about every type and style of .22 rifle ever made, but my two favorites have always been my Nylon 66 & the Marlin Model 60. While they are not as accurate as my HB Ruger Target Model10-22's, but they are my favorite .22 Rifle to go out and plink and hunt with. The thing I love about the Marlin 60 and my Nylon 66 is that they are bothTube Fed and don't have a damn magazine that you spend half your time re-loading.

My Model 60's and Nylon 66 have always been uber reliable, and will shoot well under an inch at 25 yards and right around 1 inch at 50 yards shooting 5- shot groups with CCI Stinger, WW Super X JHP, and the HV Aquilla HP ammo.
Not a tack driver or "match" rifle by any means, but damn sure minute of Turtle heads at 25 yards, and plenty accurate for coons, skunks, and other vermin here at the Ranch.

My recommendation to you is buy a really clean Marlin Model 60 on Gunbroker for less than a new 10-22 and have fun. They are plenty accurate & reliable in my experience.
As reliable as most claim the 10-22's are supposed to be, that has not been my experience in the cheaper Wallmart versions. I've never owned a 10-22 that didn't jam, and I'm not a fan of their Rotary Magazine design.
Likewise, I don't think the stock was walnut but some hardwood species. Not a tack driver but plenty accurate as offered for squirrels, crows and such.
My oldest son has had one for a bunch of years now. It isn't walnut. But it has never jammed or failed to fire, extract, and eject with cheap ammo.

It's a fun blaster with pretty good balance. We did crack the stock and have to replace it though.

Ruger #1149 and 1150 are Lipseys specials with 22" barrels that are currently available.
Thanks for all for the replies. Not looking for bench rest accuracy but just a good plinker. I've been going back to open sights recently just for the heck of it and the longer barrels and sight radius really help with that.

Didn't know about the 990 model but looked them up on gunbroker. Those are very nice, at least the owners think so. wink Seriously, the walnut stocks definitely look nicer and I like the dovetailed front sight vs. the one piece ramp of the 60, that could be easily replaced with something higher if I mounted a peep sight.
I bought one new around 1984. Really wanted a 10/22 but couldn't afford it at the time. Seems as best as I can remember, it was around a 1.5" 50 yard shooter with its preferred ammo. Always made me nervous to have my fingers up around the muzzle to open the loading tube... especially if I needed to clear a jam!

I ended up selling it several years later and did buy a 10/22. That being said, after doing some reading on them on Rimfire Central awhile back, I did kind of lust after the Walnut-stocked 50th Anniversary model they put out a couple of years ago.
First firearm I ever bought with my own money. Paid $45 for it brand new at Woolco in the early '80s. I cannot imagine how many rounds have been through it or how many squirrels it has put in the pot. As long as it is kept reasonably clean, it keeps on shucking and it is more accurate than it should be expected to shoot. It is a one holer at 25 yards with most any ammo. It doesn't get used much any more, due to its more sophisticated safe mates, but does still get an outing when I feel like going back to my childhood for awhile.
The Model 60 I had was as accurate out of the box with open sights as any out of the box semiauto 22 I've ever bought. Because of the Marlin's longer barrel it's open sights were easy to use. The Marlin always worked ok as long as I kept the area around the chamber relatively clean. Wish I had kept it.
Originally Posted by DakotaDeer
My oldest son has had one for a bunch of years now. It isn't walnut. But it has never jammed or failed to fire, extract, and eject with cheap ammo.

It's a fun blaster with pretty good balance. We did crack the stock and have to replace it though.

Ruger #1149 and 1150 are Lipseys specials with 22" barrels that are currently available.

After all the nice reviews of the Marlin, I went ahead and got a Ruger 22" Sporter, the blued 1150 model. wink

I'd looked for one of those for months but all of the online stores were out of them and nothing on gunbroker except a stainless one a few months ago at near MSRP. Saw a stainless model at a gunshow in January but again, the owner wanted more than MSRP for a used rifle.

Just for the heck of it I made one last search on gunbroker last night for "ruger 1149" and "ruger 1150" and lo and behold, one dealer had one of each. So after cogitating overnight I bought the blued model this morning. The Marlin is a good rifle, I even went down to Sportsman's Warehouse last night to look at a couple, but I'm familiar with the Ruger and it comes with a scope rail and dovetail front sight and a couple of other things that make it a bit more desirable for me.

Anyway, thanks again for the replies, it's always good to have choices.


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If anybody's looking for one the dealer still has the stainless model for sale, $275 starting bid with $285 buy it now. Just search on gunbroker for "ruger 1149".
The first rifle I ever bought was a model 60. It was very reliable, after 3 to 4 hundred rounds it would start to FTF/FTE until it got cleaned. Very accurate as well. Only real bad thing was the trigger, pretty bad.. No easy way to improve at he time.
Originally Posted by Jim in Idaho
So, what's the scoop on them? I'm talking about the older "real" JM Model 60's. These haven't attained rock star status like the 39 and there are a bunch on gunbroker in good shape for well under $200.

Was the stock actual walnut or was there a time they were walnut and they went to hardwood?

How is the reliability? I had a Marlin 99-M1 back in the 1960's that was dressed up like an M1 carbine and it was a jam-a-matic. Plus the aluminum receiver wouldn't hold the scope tip off rings, no matter how I tightened them they kept sliding. Has anybody had that problem with them?

Basically looking for a longer barreled semi-auto than a Ruger and there aren't a lot out there except the older 22" barreled Marlins and some scarce Lipsey's "walmart special" models of a 10/22, which are also twice as much as the M60 when you can even find them.


My little brother received a new Model 60 for Christmas in the mid '80's. It had a birch stock and from what I recall, the open sights were very well regulated right from the factory. Scoping it was not a big deal. The grooves on the receiver were much better than the ones on my Nylon 66. I don't ever remember an issue with the scope slipping or losing zero like the Nylon 66 did.

Very reliable, which is good, because you really don't want to take it apart unless you have to.

I think they're great little rimfires.
Posted By: poboy Re: Marlin Model 60 experiences? - 03/23/15
My Model 60 was made about 1964. Stamped
Western Auto - "Revelation". Grandad gave it to me about 1966
when his eyes got bad. It is extremely accurate and
shows it's age. I had to buy the obligatory Ruger 10-22
some time in the 80s. Ruger lives in the safe. I like to
shoot regular ammo in the Marlin. I shoot Stingers,
Velocitors(sp) etc. in the Ruger. I am confident with
the Marlin open sites and that's what works for me.
Mine had some problems feeding and I found out there was an upgraded feeding piece and spring and wala, worked like a champ. Pretty sure mine is a birch stock but seems to run well and is plenty accurate for me and the kids to shoot.
Based on the walnut stock, I think this was a transitional rifle made during the shift from 99s to 60s. Dad got it at Otis AFB BX in early '64. He passed in '12. I put a scope on her and a better trigger afterwards and drove a Velocitor thru this gal's head with it in August '13. Her crime was chasing does and fawns.

My Model 60 experiences have been great for the last 50 years... smile

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Have never owned a Marlin M60 but have cleaned several that the owners said were acting up. After thousands of rounds you would be surprised at the gunk that piles up inside the reciever. They arent hard to take apart after you do it a couple of times. After a good cleaning they are good to go thousands of more rounds.
Mine is a 1971 vintage, hardwood stock, and it'll outshoot any factory 10/22 without a problem. It's not as reliable, but I've had it longer, and have probably killed a traincar load of squirrels and rabbits with it over the years.

In the same period of time, I've had a half-dozen or more 10/22s and none of them could begin to shoot as well as the old Marlin does. It's ammo-fussy, to be sure, if it's not round-nosed, it won't feed with a crap, but it shoots that stuff awfully well.

It was my first rifle, and I'll keep it until I pass on.
Last year I had an friend who knew I was into guns ask be to sell a few guns his neighbor inherited from his deceased father.

I at the time was not interested in the two ,22 rifles so I took them to a local gun shop for consignment. The 22's were Marlin model 60's. After reading this I wish I had kept them for $45.00 each.

Doc
When I was a kid, we were expected to put squirrel on the dinner table on a regular basis. This had nothing to do with "sporting" it was all about putting food on the table. The season opened in early September, and I hunted 2-4 times per week, every week, until the season ended. We had a Marlin 60, just with the little 3/4" 4x scope on it. We shot truckloads of squirrel guns with that little rig over the years. Normal maintenance, regular cleaning. It never failed, never miss-fired once. Somewhere along the line, an old United 4X x 40 scope found it's way onto the gun, and it just kept killing squirrels. My brother got that gun when we split up Dad's stuff after he passed. It's pretty beat up-scratches, dings in the wood, all the marks of an honest working gun. In my opinion, for the price, they're a good gun. As far as accuracy is concerned, this one always seemed to like standard velocity Remington stuff the best. We always took head shots as we were sternly coached not to waist any meat. That gun put many a meal on the table, and we sold one heck of a bunch of tails to Mepps that came from the work that gun did.
Agree with the previous posts. Marlin 60 are fun to shoot, reliable, and pretty accurate. Nylon 66 is another one I have shot and wish I had one. I was impressed by how accurate it shot. Like the 60 it has a tube mag which a prefer over clips. The trigger on the 60 is bad. BUT, I believe it was over at rimfire central I found how to adjust the trigger from a good tutorial. I did have to take it apart over a dozen times to get it right but trigger went from 6 lb. to 3.5. The very small C-clips are easy to loose and may want to pick some up at a hardware store before attempting.
I believe one poster mentioned HV ammo. I live in a rural area and 22lr is darn hard to find but I have about 1500 rounds of CCI SV.

Does the 60 shoot standard velocity ammo reliably ?
I got the Model 60's cousin the clip/magzine fed Marlin 995 for Christmas in 1985. It is just an 18" barreled 60 with a walnut stock and factory 7 shot clip. It dead accurate with lots of different ammo, cycles just fine as long as it is kept reasonably clean and very handy. I have killed hundreds if not thousands of squirrels, rabbits, crows, coons, possums with it and even a couple of coyotes. I would not trade it for any 10-22.
I own 4 of them. I like the later composite stock versions best. I have switched to a CZ452 ZKM heavy barrel because it rations 22 better. But when shooting with three different guys, always benched for prairie dogs, I say the M60 was more accurate.

The scope sliding to the rear can be solved for less than $20 by getting a one-piece Leapers 3/8 dovetail mount.

This is 20 years ago when i was buying broken 22s at lunch to fix them at night, and resell, there were more Marlin 60s being sold world wide than all other 22s combined.
I use these when I want to mount a scope on a Marlin semi auto 22lr. I wipe down the grooves with alcohol to remove any oil and debris. These have a lot of clamping ability and work great.
http://www.amazon.com/UTG-Airgun-Me...sr=8-11&keywords=air+gun+scope+mount
I like to use the 2-piece B-Square 3/8" groove to Weaver adapters, their part #17025. Weaver also makes adapters, but I like the B-Square units because they aren't as thick, so a scope can be mounted a little lower.
I bought a Model 60 just because everyone and their brother has a 10/22. It is a great little gun.
Originally Posted by Jim in Idaho
So, what's the scoop on them? I'm talking about the older "real" JM Model 60's. These haven't attained rock star status like the 39 and there are a bunch on gunbroker in good shape for well under $200.

Was the stock actual walnut or was there a time they were walnut and they went to hardwood?

How is the reliability? I had a Marlin 99-M1 back in the 1960's that was dressed up like an M1 carbine and it was a jam-a-matic. Plus the aluminum receiver wouldn't hold the scope tip off rings, no matter how I tightened them they kept sliding. Has anybody had that problem with them?

Basically looking for a longer barreled semi-auto than a Ruger and there aren't a lot out there except the older 22" barreled Marlins and some scarce Lipsey's "walmart special" models of a 10/22, which are also twice as much as the M60 when you can even find them.


Jim, most of the stocks I see are hardwood, but a few walnut variations are out there.
I have experience with approximately a dozen Marlin model 60 variations including 60, 795, 7000, 60, 75, and 989M2 models. All of them share the same basic action design with minor changes over the years. Some are tube fed, some are mag fed. The triggers are a bit scratchy but can be improved. Take a look at www.diproductsinc.com for some nifty trigger guards and triggers to improve shootability. My father has a dip trigger on a 795 in a boyds stock and it is very nice. Keep them clean and maybe replace the recoil spring from time to time and they will run forever. Accuracy is quite good especially considering the price point. I always keep my eye out for a good buy on a model 60 and/or variation to add to the safe.
See my earlier post in this thread for my solution to scope "creep" on the receiver rails.
Good luck.
Ive got probably 10,000 fond memories with a Marlin model 60. All with my late grandfather. My cousins and I all learned how to shoot with one. Nothing but fond memories of my child hood and powder burnt with grandpa. A few years ago I was offered a stainless model in trade and I jumped at the chance.

I sure miss my grandpa as he was an incredible man whom I loved deeply and spent tons of time with, but I feel a little connected every time I shoot my model 60, and my Colt 1911.
wish i still had my glenfield mod 60 as kid took apart to clean and never got back together eventally bought the 10/22 that everyone raves over while it's decent the 60 was more accurate and reliable in my opinion
I'm 59 years old and I'm still shooting mine glenfield 60 that I purchased with my paper route money when I was 12.
It has a 3-9X40mm scope on it now, thats the only upgrade it needed.
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