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\n
\"Sauer
This rifle raises the bar on standard takedown rifles. It has a solid action with a receiver that can accommodate all calibers from 6.5x55mm up to the massive .458 Lott. Numerous options and calibers are available, including beautifully figured stocks of grade 4 Turkish walnut. MSRP: 6,333 to $10,607. <\/figcaption><\/figure>\n\n\n\n

This rifle raises the bar on standard takedown rifles. It has a solid action with a receiver that can accommodate all calibers from 6.5x55mm up to the massive .458 Lott. Numerous options and calibers are available, including beautifully figured stocks of grade 4 Turkish walnut. MSRP can get up there, ranging from $6,333 to $10,607. For even more info, please visit sauer.de\/en<\/a>.<\/p>\n","post_title":"6 High-Quality Takedown Rifles for Easy Transport","post_excerpt":"","post_status":"publish","comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","post_password":"","post_name":"best-takedown-rifles","to_ping":"","pinged":"","post_modified":"2023-10-31 22:40:55","post_modified_gmt":"2023-11-01 02:40:55","post_content_filtered":"","post_parent":0,"guid":"https:\/\/www.dev.athlonoutdoors.com\/2015\/08\/26\/best-takedown-rifles\/","menu_order":0,"post_type":"post","post_mime_type":"","comment_count":"0","filter":"raw"},{"ID":109186,"post_author":"303","post_date":"2015-05-28 09:45:25","post_date_gmt":"2015-05-28 13:45:25","post_content":"\n\nOne of the greatest fallacies for those looking to upgrade or augment their home defense arsenal with a new long gun is the idea that you can\u2019t possibly defend your hearth and homestead without military-grade hardware, sophisticated optics and a 200-round drum magazine. Statistics, and reality, argue against that concept in terms of absolute requirements for repelling borders and defending castle walls. Do you typically need to blow off 200 rounds in a single in-home encounter or shoot the wings off a gnat at 300 yards? Nope. Do you really need to be lugging a 12-pound defensive package around the house? No again. So, what do you need?\n\nFirst off, as with any tool, look at the job the tool needs to do. Forget hordes of angry villagers with torches at the gates, or even herds of innocent zombies just out for a midnight snack. The statistical norm for a home \u201cattack\u201d is one or two people attempting to break in for one of three reasons: intoxication, anger or theft. These run anywhere from the drunk mistaking your home for somebody else\u2019s, the ex-boyfriend out for revenge, the classic (and random) middle-of-the-night burglar and the organized home invasion. With the exception of the more \u201ctargeted\u201d home invasion, most threats to the occupants are not particularly well thought out, not highly organized and not normally carried out by more than one or two hostiles. Most are close up, do not involve either extended timeframes or extended distances and do not burn up truckloads of ammunition.\n\nAn apartment dweller would rarely be shooting 300 yards in defense of wife and child, and the family living in a quiet suburban cul-de-sac is unlikely to need to shoot beyond the boundaries of either front yard or back fence. Obviously, the remote ranch house an hour from the nearest 911 response is a different matter, but for the majority of us, the home-defense rifle simply doesn\u2019t have to be a heavy, high-capacity, credit-card buster.\n\n\"lever-action, A tall gold bead like this Marbles Carbine Blade comes standard on some lever guns and can be ordered from Brownells.[\/caption]\n\nGiven all that, why do we even want a rifle in the first place? There are several reasons\u2014a rifle tends to be more powerful than a handgun (even when firing handgun ammunition because of velocity gains through longer barrels), it\u2019s frequently easier for many to shoot well at varying distances than a handgun, it extends the practical range over a handgun, it can be more intimidating to an intruder than the average handgun, and the right rifle can be relatively quick for even a non-gunnie to learn and operate effectively.\n\nRELATED STORY: 6 Manufacturers Selling Lever-Action Rifles For Home Defense Or Hunting<\/a><\/strong>\n\nIn choosing your rifle priority one is reliability. It has to function, should be simple to operate and should not be subject to ammo sensitivity against a wide range of brands and bullet types. Priority two is power, which should be in a \u201cserious\u201d caliber, such as .38 Special on up. And priority three, believe it or not, brings accuracy in last. It\u2019s nice to be able to hit a marauding gnat at 300 yards, but in most cases if your home-defense rifle can hold inside 4 inches at 100 yards, it\u2019ll be good enough.\n\nAll of this leads up, as you\u2019ve noticed, to the humble lever-action rifle as a candidate for your home-defense arsenal.\n\nThere\u2019s nothing wrong with the idea of a lever action, however archaic you perceive it to be. The repeating lever action rifle in many calibers, several models and multiple configurations was one of the original home-defense tools for much of the Western half of the U.S. for well over half a century, where it was just as effective in that role as it was in the hands of generations of hunters who brought home food for the table using it.\n\n\"lever-action, One of the advantages of a lever action is that you can tell at a glance if it\u2019s cocked or not.[\/caption]\n\nThe design is simple to learn: Fill it up through the loading gate, work the lever to chamber a round, cock the hammer, pull the trigger to fire, repeat as necessary. No separate magazines to lose or have fail to seat completely, no complicated controls to remember, no scope to knock loose, fog, or blur out at inside-the-house distances, no dead batteries, and less chance of \u201cspray-and-pray\u201d shooting as opposed to the average semi-auto like an AK-47 or AR-15.\n\nMagazine capacity, of course, is much less, but six to 10 rounds in a lever gun should easily handle 95 percent of the home-defense scenarios most of us are likely to encounter.\n\nWhich one should you choose? Look in your gun safe. You may already have what you need, whether it\u2019s Grandpa\u2019s old hand-me-down Winchester<\/a> in .30-30, a modern Browning BLR<\/a> in .308 Winchester, or even your Cowboy Action Shooting competition Marlin<\/a> or Uberti<\/a>. If not, evaluate your layout and decide whether you want the additional power and range for both indoor and outdoor applications of a centerfire rifle cartridge like the .30-30 or .308, or if a handgun caliber that\u2019ll be softer on the eardrums indoors while still easily carrying 50 or 75 yards outdoors would be a better choice.\n\nFor some, the utility of stockpiling one load for rifle and handgun, like the .357 Mag or .45 Colt, is a further consideration. For others, the ability of family members to tolerate recoil is a factor, and while I do recommend something heavier, in such cases the rimfires in .22 LR, .22 Mag and the hotter .17 calibers may be a better choice with no disconcerting recoil or extreme muzzle blast. My wife has two much-beloved Marlin 1894s<\/a> in .32-20 from her cowboy competition days. She knows them intimately, she shoots them better than anything else in the vault, and in her case, she\u2019d be far better off with her Marlins than with any of my tricked-out AR-15s if it came to somebody kicking our front door in.\n\nClose Quarters<\/strong>\n\n\"lever-action, \u201cShorter barrels can shoot every bit as accurately as longer barrels, and they maneuver infinitely better through tight confines\u2026 \u201d[\/caption]\n\nIndoor practicality dictates a short barrel. Shorter barrels can shoot every bit as accurately as longer barrels, and they maneuver infinitely better through tight confines and angles if you have to. The general recommendation in case of loud noises in the middle of the night is to congregate with a phone in one defensible location in the home while waiting for the sirens, but sometimes you have to do what you have to do, and a short, light, handy lever-action carbine just navigates easier all the way round than a longer barrel does. I do own Grandpa\u2019s old Winchester Model 94<\/a> in .30-30, and its 20-inch barrel is the longest I\u2019d go on a home-defense carbine by choice. I also have a 24-inch Marlin 1894 in .45 Colt that I could tolerate reasonably well, if it was all I had. Keep in mind that octagonal barrels will be heavier than round, and the shorter you go the less magazine capacity. There\u2019s no absolute, so buy what works best for you, or use what you already have if money\u2019s tight.\n\nRELATED STORY: Uberti\u2019s Silverboy Lever-Action Rifle in .22 LR<\/a><\/strong>\n\nLever action sights may not be outstanding, but they are typically usable as they come. The standard blade front\/notch rear is perfectly adequate for most shooters with decent eyesight out to 75 yards and farther, if necessary. Most can be easily adjusted out to 100 yards and used without expensive aftermarket products. If you do want refinements, an aperture rear can help with distances and a white-outline front blade, or a gold bead, can help line things up in darker lighting. Various methods of mounting scopes exist, with Marlins and Brownings being the easiest as they come pre-drilled and tapped for an optic. Indoors, a scope works against you and outdoors it can work for you, but it tends to slow down target acquisition. A good set of iron sights can put you right on target, right now, and that\u2019s important in close-up encounters.\n\nMost classic lever guns use under-barrel tube magazines, from the traditional side-loading Winchester to the \u201crimfire style\u201d on many .22 lever actions and on the Henry<\/a> rimfires and centerfires, where rounds are loaded through a port in the forward section of the magazine tube itself. The Browning BLR uses a detachable box magazine. In the most common home-defense context, there\u2019s no real advantage to any of these types since you\u2019re not looking at speed reloads anyway.\n\nIn the heavier calibers, consider a good recoil pad, if the new carbine doesn\u2019t already have one. The .30-30 is a fairly mild round for a rifle, but its stock design can punch a shoulder smartly with a solid steel or composite buttplate. Same with the .44 Mag caliber. You\u2019ll get more cooperation in learning and practice from family members if you reduce the \u201couch\u201d factor going in.\n\nThreat Takedown<\/strong>\n\n\"lever-action-rifles-7\"\n\nLearn how to work your home with your new lever gun once you make your choice. Take corners wide, where possible. Don\u2019t walk into a room or round a blind corner barrel-first\u2014you don\u2019t know who might be there to grab it. Don\u2019t round a close corner muzzle-up, it\u2019s too easy for an intruder to deflect the barrel or disarm you entirely. Navigate tight corners and doorways muzzle-down, making the gun harder to grab or deflect, and you can simply drop to one knee while pivoting the barrel up and firing if it is grabbed. Remember, the carbine can also make a very effective impact weapon, but make absolutely sure anybody using it understands whatever safety mechanism it may have. Simple, fast, light, reliable and affordable, the lever action still has a place.\n\nRELATED STORY: 15 New Guns and Accessories in the \"Old West\"<\/a><\/strong>","post_title":"Lifesaving Lever-Action Rifles For Home Defense","post_excerpt":"These classic lever-action rifles deliver reliable home-defense firepower when it matters most!","post_status":"publish","comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","post_password":"","post_name":"lifesaving-lever-action-rifles-for-home-defense","to_ping":"","pinged":"\nhttps:\/\/gunsoftheoldwest.com\/2015\/04\/15-new-guns-and-accessories-in-the-old-west\/","post_modified":"2023-05-31 12:06:26","post_modified_gmt":"2023-05-31 12:06:26","post_content_filtered":"","post_parent":0,"guid":"https:\/\/www.dev.athlonoutdoors.com\/2015\/05\/28\/lifesaving-lever-action-rifles-for-home-defense\/","menu_order":0,"post_type":"post","post_mime_type":"","comment_count":"0","filter":"raw"},{"ID":109242,"post_author":"303","post_date":"2015-05-25 09:00:37","post_date_gmt":"2015-05-25 13:00:37","post_content":"\n\nThe lever-action rifle is alive and doing quite well among both domestic and foreign makers, and there\u2019s a wide field to choose from in selecting one for home-defense use. Imagine what you want it to do before you go shopping around. The centerfire models will have a fair amount of crossover in serving both the home front and the hunting camp, if that\u2019s important to you, and you can obviously stretch your money farther by extending the dual utility of a true rifle caliber. The so-called pistol-caliber lever guns have the advantage of less recoil and ammunition commonality with handguns that might be in the house, and in any of the magnum calibers they\u2019re still no slouch. With practical ranges out to 150 yards and more in the hands of a good shooter, they can also easily handle both defense and hunting chores within their practical limitations. See the gallery above to learn about six manufacturers selling lever-action rifles.\n\n \n\nFor More Information<\/strong>\n\nWinchester\nhttp:\/\/www.winchesterguns.com<\/a>\n\nMarlin Firearms\nhttp:\/\/www.marlinfirearms.com<\/a>\n\nBrowning\nhttp:\/\/www.browning.com<\/a>\n\nHenry Repeating Arms\nhttp:\/\/www.henryrifles.com<\/a>\n\nMossberg\nhttp:\/\/www.mossberg.com<\/a>\n\nRossi USA\nhttp:\/\/www.rossiusa.com<\/a>\n\n \n\nRelated Stories<\/strong>\n\n4 New Old West Guns For 2015<\/a>\n\nNew For 2015: Browning AB3 Hunter Rifle<\/a>\n\nNew For 2015: Winchester XPR Bolt-Action Rifle<\/a>\n\nNew Sporting Rifles for 2014 | Varmint, Hunting & Long-Range Roundup<\/a>\n\nGun Review: Mossberg\u2019s Duck Commanders<\/a>","post_title":"6 Manufacturers Selling Lever-Action Rifles For Home Defense Or Hunting","post_excerpt":"There's a wide field of both domestic and foreign manufacturers offering lever-action rifles for home defense and hunting.","post_status":"publish","comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","post_password":"","post_name":"6-manufacturers-selling-lever-action-rifles-for-home-defense-or-hunting","to_ping":"","pinged":"https:\/\/www.personaldefenseworld.com\/2015\/04\/4-new-old-west-guns-for-2015\/#4-new-old-west-guns-for-2015\nhttps:\/\/www.personaldefenseworld.com\/2015\/02\/new-2015-browning-ab3-hunter-rifle\/\nhttps:\/\/www.personaldefenseworld.com\/2015\/01\/new-2015-winchester-xpr-bolt-action-rifle\/\nhttps:\/\/www.tactical-life.com\/firearms\/new-sporting-rifles-for-2014\/","post_modified":"2023-05-31 12:06:54","post_modified_gmt":"2023-05-31 12:06:54","post_content_filtered":"","post_parent":0,"guid":"https:\/\/www.dev.athlonoutdoors.com\/2015\/05\/25\/6-manufacturers-selling-lever-action-rifles-for-home-defense-or-hunting\/","menu_order":0,"post_type":"post","post_mime_type":"","comment_count":"0","filter":"raw"}],"next":false,"prev":true,"total_page":12},"paged":1,"column_class":"jeg_col_2o3","class":"jnews_block_23"};

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Sauer 202 Take Down<\/h4>\n\n\n\n
\"Sauer
This rifle raises the bar on standard takedown rifles. It has a solid action with a receiver that can accommodate all calibers from 6.5x55mm up to the massive .458 Lott. Numerous options and calibers are available, including beautifully figured stocks of grade 4 Turkish walnut. MSRP: 6,333 to $10,607. <\/figcaption><\/figure>\n\n\n\n

This rifle raises the bar on standard takedown rifles. It has a solid action with a receiver that can accommodate all calibers from 6.5x55mm up to the massive .458 Lott. Numerous options and calibers are available, including beautifully figured stocks of grade 4 Turkish walnut. MSRP can get up there, ranging from $6,333 to $10,607. For even more info, please visit sauer.de\/en<\/a>.<\/p>\n","post_title":"6 High-Quality Takedown Rifles for Easy Transport","post_excerpt":"","post_status":"publish","comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","post_password":"","post_name":"best-takedown-rifles","to_ping":"","pinged":"","post_modified":"2023-10-31 22:40:55","post_modified_gmt":"2023-11-01 02:40:55","post_content_filtered":"","post_parent":0,"guid":"https:\/\/www.dev.athlonoutdoors.com\/2015\/08\/26\/best-takedown-rifles\/","menu_order":0,"post_type":"post","post_mime_type":"","comment_count":"0","filter":"raw"},{"ID":109186,"post_author":"303","post_date":"2015-05-28 09:45:25","post_date_gmt":"2015-05-28 13:45:25","post_content":"\n\nOne of the greatest fallacies for those looking to upgrade or augment their home defense arsenal with a new long gun is the idea that you can\u2019t possibly defend your hearth and homestead without military-grade hardware, sophisticated optics and a 200-round drum magazine. Statistics, and reality, argue against that concept in terms of absolute requirements for repelling borders and defending castle walls. Do you typically need to blow off 200 rounds in a single in-home encounter or shoot the wings off a gnat at 300 yards? Nope. Do you really need to be lugging a 12-pound defensive package around the house? No again. So, what do you need?\n\nFirst off, as with any tool, look at the job the tool needs to do. Forget hordes of angry villagers with torches at the gates, or even herds of innocent zombies just out for a midnight snack. The statistical norm for a home \u201cattack\u201d is one or two people attempting to break in for one of three reasons: intoxication, anger or theft. These run anywhere from the drunk mistaking your home for somebody else\u2019s, the ex-boyfriend out for revenge, the classic (and random) middle-of-the-night burglar and the organized home invasion. With the exception of the more \u201ctargeted\u201d home invasion, most threats to the occupants are not particularly well thought out, not highly organized and not normally carried out by more than one or two hostiles. Most are close up, do not involve either extended timeframes or extended distances and do not burn up truckloads of ammunition.\n\nAn apartment dweller would rarely be shooting 300 yards in defense of wife and child, and the family living in a quiet suburban cul-de-sac is unlikely to need to shoot beyond the boundaries of either front yard or back fence. Obviously, the remote ranch house an hour from the nearest 911 response is a different matter, but for the majority of us, the home-defense rifle simply doesn\u2019t have to be a heavy, high-capacity, credit-card buster.\n\n\"lever-action, A tall gold bead like this Marbles Carbine Blade comes standard on some lever guns and can be ordered from Brownells.[\/caption]\n\nGiven all that, why do we even want a rifle in the first place? There are several reasons\u2014a rifle tends to be more powerful than a handgun (even when firing handgun ammunition because of velocity gains through longer barrels), it\u2019s frequently easier for many to shoot well at varying distances than a handgun, it extends the practical range over a handgun, it can be more intimidating to an intruder than the average handgun, and the right rifle can be relatively quick for even a non-gunnie to learn and operate effectively.\n\nRELATED STORY: 6 Manufacturers Selling Lever-Action Rifles For Home Defense Or Hunting<\/a><\/strong>\n\nIn choosing your rifle priority one is reliability. It has to function, should be simple to operate and should not be subject to ammo sensitivity against a wide range of brands and bullet types. Priority two is power, which should be in a \u201cserious\u201d caliber, such as .38 Special on up. And priority three, believe it or not, brings accuracy in last. It\u2019s nice to be able to hit a marauding gnat at 300 yards, but in most cases if your home-defense rifle can hold inside 4 inches at 100 yards, it\u2019ll be good enough.\n\nAll of this leads up, as you\u2019ve noticed, to the humble lever-action rifle as a candidate for your home-defense arsenal.\n\nThere\u2019s nothing wrong with the idea of a lever action, however archaic you perceive it to be. The repeating lever action rifle in many calibers, several models and multiple configurations was one of the original home-defense tools for much of the Western half of the U.S. for well over half a century, where it was just as effective in that role as it was in the hands of generations of hunters who brought home food for the table using it.\n\n\"lever-action, One of the advantages of a lever action is that you can tell at a glance if it\u2019s cocked or not.[\/caption]\n\nThe design is simple to learn: Fill it up through the loading gate, work the lever to chamber a round, cock the hammer, pull the trigger to fire, repeat as necessary. No separate magazines to lose or have fail to seat completely, no complicated controls to remember, no scope to knock loose, fog, or blur out at inside-the-house distances, no dead batteries, and less chance of \u201cspray-and-pray\u201d shooting as opposed to the average semi-auto like an AK-47 or AR-15.\n\nMagazine capacity, of course, is much less, but six to 10 rounds in a lever gun should easily handle 95 percent of the home-defense scenarios most of us are likely to encounter.\n\nWhich one should you choose? Look in your gun safe. You may already have what you need, whether it\u2019s Grandpa\u2019s old hand-me-down Winchester<\/a> in .30-30, a modern Browning BLR<\/a> in .308 Winchester, or even your Cowboy Action Shooting competition Marlin<\/a> or Uberti<\/a>. If not, evaluate your layout and decide whether you want the additional power and range for both indoor and outdoor applications of a centerfire rifle cartridge like the .30-30 or .308, or if a handgun caliber that\u2019ll be softer on the eardrums indoors while still easily carrying 50 or 75 yards outdoors would be a better choice.\n\nFor some, the utility of stockpiling one load for rifle and handgun, like the .357 Mag or .45 Colt, is a further consideration. For others, the ability of family members to tolerate recoil is a factor, and while I do recommend something heavier, in such cases the rimfires in .22 LR, .22 Mag and the hotter .17 calibers may be a better choice with no disconcerting recoil or extreme muzzle blast. My wife has two much-beloved Marlin 1894s<\/a> in .32-20 from her cowboy competition days. She knows them intimately, she shoots them better than anything else in the vault, and in her case, she\u2019d be far better off with her Marlins than with any of my tricked-out AR-15s if it came to somebody kicking our front door in.\n\nClose Quarters<\/strong>\n\n\"lever-action, \u201cShorter barrels can shoot every bit as accurately as longer barrels, and they maneuver infinitely better through tight confines\u2026 \u201d[\/caption]\n\nIndoor practicality dictates a short barrel. Shorter barrels can shoot every bit as accurately as longer barrels, and they maneuver infinitely better through tight confines and angles if you have to. The general recommendation in case of loud noises in the middle of the night is to congregate with a phone in one defensible location in the home while waiting for the sirens, but sometimes you have to do what you have to do, and a short, light, handy lever-action carbine just navigates easier all the way round than a longer barrel does. I do own Grandpa\u2019s old Winchester Model 94<\/a> in .30-30, and its 20-inch barrel is the longest I\u2019d go on a home-defense carbine by choice. I also have a 24-inch Marlin 1894 in .45 Colt that I could tolerate reasonably well, if it was all I had. Keep in mind that octagonal barrels will be heavier than round, and the shorter you go the less magazine capacity. There\u2019s no absolute, so buy what works best for you, or use what you already have if money\u2019s tight.\n\nRELATED STORY: Uberti\u2019s Silverboy Lever-Action Rifle in .22 LR<\/a><\/strong>\n\nLever action sights may not be outstanding, but they are typically usable as they come. The standard blade front\/notch rear is perfectly adequate for most shooters with decent eyesight out to 75 yards and farther, if necessary. Most can be easily adjusted out to 100 yards and used without expensive aftermarket products. If you do want refinements, an aperture rear can help with distances and a white-outline front blade, or a gold bead, can help line things up in darker lighting. Various methods of mounting scopes exist, with Marlins and Brownings being the easiest as they come pre-drilled and tapped for an optic. Indoors, a scope works against you and outdoors it can work for you, but it tends to slow down target acquisition. A good set of iron sights can put you right on target, right now, and that\u2019s important in close-up encounters.\n\nMost classic lever guns use under-barrel tube magazines, from the traditional side-loading Winchester to the \u201crimfire style\u201d on many .22 lever actions and on the Henry<\/a> rimfires and centerfires, where rounds are loaded through a port in the forward section of the magazine tube itself. The Browning BLR uses a detachable box magazine. In the most common home-defense context, there\u2019s no real advantage to any of these types since you\u2019re not looking at speed reloads anyway.\n\nIn the heavier calibers, consider a good recoil pad, if the new carbine doesn\u2019t already have one. The .30-30 is a fairly mild round for a rifle, but its stock design can punch a shoulder smartly with a solid steel or composite buttplate. Same with the .44 Mag caliber. You\u2019ll get more cooperation in learning and practice from family members if you reduce the \u201couch\u201d factor going in.\n\nThreat Takedown<\/strong>\n\n\"lever-action-rifles-7\"\n\nLearn how to work your home with your new lever gun once you make your choice. Take corners wide, where possible. Don\u2019t walk into a room or round a blind corner barrel-first\u2014you don\u2019t know who might be there to grab it. Don\u2019t round a close corner muzzle-up, it\u2019s too easy for an intruder to deflect the barrel or disarm you entirely. Navigate tight corners and doorways muzzle-down, making the gun harder to grab or deflect, and you can simply drop to one knee while pivoting the barrel up and firing if it is grabbed. Remember, the carbine can also make a very effective impact weapon, but make absolutely sure anybody using it understands whatever safety mechanism it may have. Simple, fast, light, reliable and affordable, the lever action still has a place.\n\nRELATED STORY: 15 New Guns and Accessories in the \"Old West\"<\/a><\/strong>","post_title":"Lifesaving Lever-Action Rifles For Home Defense","post_excerpt":"These classic lever-action rifles deliver reliable home-defense firepower when it matters most!","post_status":"publish","comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","post_password":"","post_name":"lifesaving-lever-action-rifles-for-home-defense","to_ping":"","pinged":"\nhttps:\/\/gunsoftheoldwest.com\/2015\/04\/15-new-guns-and-accessories-in-the-old-west\/","post_modified":"2023-05-31 12:06:26","post_modified_gmt":"2023-05-31 12:06:26","post_content_filtered":"","post_parent":0,"guid":"https:\/\/www.dev.athlonoutdoors.com\/2015\/05\/28\/lifesaving-lever-action-rifles-for-home-defense\/","menu_order":0,"post_type":"post","post_mime_type":"","comment_count":"0","filter":"raw"},{"ID":109242,"post_author":"303","post_date":"2015-05-25 09:00:37","post_date_gmt":"2015-05-25 13:00:37","post_content":"\n\nThe lever-action rifle is alive and doing quite well among both domestic and foreign makers, and there\u2019s a wide field to choose from in selecting one for home-defense use. Imagine what you want it to do before you go shopping around. The centerfire models will have a fair amount of crossover in serving both the home front and the hunting camp, if that\u2019s important to you, and you can obviously stretch your money farther by extending the dual utility of a true rifle caliber. The so-called pistol-caliber lever guns have the advantage of less recoil and ammunition commonality with handguns that might be in the house, and in any of the magnum calibers they\u2019re still no slouch. With practical ranges out to 150 yards and more in the hands of a good shooter, they can also easily handle both defense and hunting chores within their practical limitations. See the gallery above to learn about six manufacturers selling lever-action rifles.\n\n \n\nFor More Information<\/strong>\n\nWinchester\nhttp:\/\/www.winchesterguns.com<\/a>\n\nMarlin Firearms\nhttp:\/\/www.marlinfirearms.com<\/a>\n\nBrowning\nhttp:\/\/www.browning.com<\/a>\n\nHenry Repeating Arms\nhttp:\/\/www.henryrifles.com<\/a>\n\nMossberg\nhttp:\/\/www.mossberg.com<\/a>\n\nRossi USA\nhttp:\/\/www.rossiusa.com<\/a>\n\n \n\nRelated Stories<\/strong>\n\n4 New Old West Guns For 2015<\/a>\n\nNew For 2015: Browning AB3 Hunter Rifle<\/a>\n\nNew For 2015: Winchester XPR Bolt-Action Rifle<\/a>\n\nNew Sporting Rifles for 2014 | Varmint, Hunting & Long-Range Roundup<\/a>\n\nGun Review: Mossberg\u2019s Duck Commanders<\/a>","post_title":"6 Manufacturers Selling Lever-Action Rifles For Home Defense Or Hunting","post_excerpt":"There's a wide field of both domestic and foreign manufacturers offering lever-action rifles for home defense and hunting.","post_status":"publish","comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","post_password":"","post_name":"6-manufacturers-selling-lever-action-rifles-for-home-defense-or-hunting","to_ping":"","pinged":"https:\/\/www.personaldefenseworld.com\/2015\/04\/4-new-old-west-guns-for-2015\/#4-new-old-west-guns-for-2015\nhttps:\/\/www.personaldefenseworld.com\/2015\/02\/new-2015-browning-ab3-hunter-rifle\/\nhttps:\/\/www.personaldefenseworld.com\/2015\/01\/new-2015-winchester-xpr-bolt-action-rifle\/\nhttps:\/\/www.tactical-life.com\/firearms\/new-sporting-rifles-for-2014\/","post_modified":"2023-05-31 12:06:54","post_modified_gmt":"2023-05-31 12:06:54","post_content_filtered":"","post_parent":0,"guid":"https:\/\/www.dev.athlonoutdoors.com\/2015\/05\/25\/6-manufacturers-selling-lever-action-rifles-for-home-defense-or-hunting\/","menu_order":0,"post_type":"post","post_mime_type":"","comment_count":"0","filter":"raw"}],"next":false,"prev":true,"total_page":12},"paged":1,"column_class":"jeg_col_2o3","class":"jnews_block_23"};

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\n

This is the Cadillac of takedown rifles. The Traveler is available in three grades\u2014 Classic, Safari and African\u2014and you can choose from a limitless array of upgrades. This rifle has a unique takedown system that offers threadless assembly and disassembly. It\u2019s available in calibers from .22-250 to .450 Dakota. Lastly is MSRP, which comes in at $8,890. For even more info, please visit dakotaarms.com<\/a>.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

Sauer 202 Take Down<\/h4>\n\n\n\n
\"Sauer
This rifle raises the bar on standard takedown rifles. It has a solid action with a receiver that can accommodate all calibers from 6.5x55mm up to the massive .458 Lott. Numerous options and calibers are available, including beautifully figured stocks of grade 4 Turkish walnut. MSRP: 6,333 to $10,607. <\/figcaption><\/figure>\n\n\n\n

This rifle raises the bar on standard takedown rifles. It has a solid action with a receiver that can accommodate all calibers from 6.5x55mm up to the massive .458 Lott. Numerous options and calibers are available, including beautifully figured stocks of grade 4 Turkish walnut. MSRP can get up there, ranging from $6,333 to $10,607. For even more info, please visit sauer.de\/en<\/a>.<\/p>\n","post_title":"6 High-Quality Takedown Rifles for Easy Transport","post_excerpt":"","post_status":"publish","comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","post_password":"","post_name":"best-takedown-rifles","to_ping":"","pinged":"","post_modified":"2023-10-31 22:40:55","post_modified_gmt":"2023-11-01 02:40:55","post_content_filtered":"","post_parent":0,"guid":"https:\/\/www.dev.athlonoutdoors.com\/2015\/08\/26\/best-takedown-rifles\/","menu_order":0,"post_type":"post","post_mime_type":"","comment_count":"0","filter":"raw"},{"ID":109186,"post_author":"303","post_date":"2015-05-28 09:45:25","post_date_gmt":"2015-05-28 13:45:25","post_content":"\n\nOne of the greatest fallacies for those looking to upgrade or augment their home defense arsenal with a new long gun is the idea that you can\u2019t possibly defend your hearth and homestead without military-grade hardware, sophisticated optics and a 200-round drum magazine. Statistics, and reality, argue against that concept in terms of absolute requirements for repelling borders and defending castle walls. Do you typically need to blow off 200 rounds in a single in-home encounter or shoot the wings off a gnat at 300 yards? Nope. Do you really need to be lugging a 12-pound defensive package around the house? No again. So, what do you need?\n\nFirst off, as with any tool, look at the job the tool needs to do. Forget hordes of angry villagers with torches at the gates, or even herds of innocent zombies just out for a midnight snack. The statistical norm for a home \u201cattack\u201d is one or two people attempting to break in for one of three reasons: intoxication, anger or theft. These run anywhere from the drunk mistaking your home for somebody else\u2019s, the ex-boyfriend out for revenge, the classic (and random) middle-of-the-night burglar and the organized home invasion. With the exception of the more \u201ctargeted\u201d home invasion, most threats to the occupants are not particularly well thought out, not highly organized and not normally carried out by more than one or two hostiles. Most are close up, do not involve either extended timeframes or extended distances and do not burn up truckloads of ammunition.\n\nAn apartment dweller would rarely be shooting 300 yards in defense of wife and child, and the family living in a quiet suburban cul-de-sac is unlikely to need to shoot beyond the boundaries of either front yard or back fence. Obviously, the remote ranch house an hour from the nearest 911 response is a different matter, but for the majority of us, the home-defense rifle simply doesn\u2019t have to be a heavy, high-capacity, credit-card buster.\n\n\"lever-action, A tall gold bead like this Marbles Carbine Blade comes standard on some lever guns and can be ordered from Brownells.[\/caption]\n\nGiven all that, why do we even want a rifle in the first place? There are several reasons\u2014a rifle tends to be more powerful than a handgun (even when firing handgun ammunition because of velocity gains through longer barrels), it\u2019s frequently easier for many to shoot well at varying distances than a handgun, it extends the practical range over a handgun, it can be more intimidating to an intruder than the average handgun, and the right rifle can be relatively quick for even a non-gunnie to learn and operate effectively.\n\nRELATED STORY: 6 Manufacturers Selling Lever-Action Rifles For Home Defense Or Hunting<\/a><\/strong>\n\nIn choosing your rifle priority one is reliability. It has to function, should be simple to operate and should not be subject to ammo sensitivity against a wide range of brands and bullet types. Priority two is power, which should be in a \u201cserious\u201d caliber, such as .38 Special on up. And priority three, believe it or not, brings accuracy in last. It\u2019s nice to be able to hit a marauding gnat at 300 yards, but in most cases if your home-defense rifle can hold inside 4 inches at 100 yards, it\u2019ll be good enough.\n\nAll of this leads up, as you\u2019ve noticed, to the humble lever-action rifle as a candidate for your home-defense arsenal.\n\nThere\u2019s nothing wrong with the idea of a lever action, however archaic you perceive it to be. The repeating lever action rifle in many calibers, several models and multiple configurations was one of the original home-defense tools for much of the Western half of the U.S. for well over half a century, where it was just as effective in that role as it was in the hands of generations of hunters who brought home food for the table using it.\n\n\"lever-action, One of the advantages of a lever action is that you can tell at a glance if it\u2019s cocked or not.[\/caption]\n\nThe design is simple to learn: Fill it up through the loading gate, work the lever to chamber a round, cock the hammer, pull the trigger to fire, repeat as necessary. No separate magazines to lose or have fail to seat completely, no complicated controls to remember, no scope to knock loose, fog, or blur out at inside-the-house distances, no dead batteries, and less chance of \u201cspray-and-pray\u201d shooting as opposed to the average semi-auto like an AK-47 or AR-15.\n\nMagazine capacity, of course, is much less, but six to 10 rounds in a lever gun should easily handle 95 percent of the home-defense scenarios most of us are likely to encounter.\n\nWhich one should you choose? Look in your gun safe. You may already have what you need, whether it\u2019s Grandpa\u2019s old hand-me-down Winchester<\/a> in .30-30, a modern Browning BLR<\/a> in .308 Winchester, or even your Cowboy Action Shooting competition Marlin<\/a> or Uberti<\/a>. If not, evaluate your layout and decide whether you want the additional power and range for both indoor and outdoor applications of a centerfire rifle cartridge like the .30-30 or .308, or if a handgun caliber that\u2019ll be softer on the eardrums indoors while still easily carrying 50 or 75 yards outdoors would be a better choice.\n\nFor some, the utility of stockpiling one load for rifle and handgun, like the .357 Mag or .45 Colt, is a further consideration. For others, the ability of family members to tolerate recoil is a factor, and while I do recommend something heavier, in such cases the rimfires in .22 LR, .22 Mag and the hotter .17 calibers may be a better choice with no disconcerting recoil or extreme muzzle blast. My wife has two much-beloved Marlin 1894s<\/a> in .32-20 from her cowboy competition days. She knows them intimately, she shoots them better than anything else in the vault, and in her case, she\u2019d be far better off with her Marlins than with any of my tricked-out AR-15s if it came to somebody kicking our front door in.\n\nClose Quarters<\/strong>\n\n\"lever-action, \u201cShorter barrels can shoot every bit as accurately as longer barrels, and they maneuver infinitely better through tight confines\u2026 \u201d[\/caption]\n\nIndoor practicality dictates a short barrel. Shorter barrels can shoot every bit as accurately as longer barrels, and they maneuver infinitely better through tight confines and angles if you have to. The general recommendation in case of loud noises in the middle of the night is to congregate with a phone in one defensible location in the home while waiting for the sirens, but sometimes you have to do what you have to do, and a short, light, handy lever-action carbine just navigates easier all the way round than a longer barrel does. I do own Grandpa\u2019s old Winchester Model 94<\/a> in .30-30, and its 20-inch barrel is the longest I\u2019d go on a home-defense carbine by choice. I also have a 24-inch Marlin 1894 in .45 Colt that I could tolerate reasonably well, if it was all I had. Keep in mind that octagonal barrels will be heavier than round, and the shorter you go the less magazine capacity. There\u2019s no absolute, so buy what works best for you, or use what you already have if money\u2019s tight.\n\nRELATED STORY: Uberti\u2019s Silverboy Lever-Action Rifle in .22 LR<\/a><\/strong>\n\nLever action sights may not be outstanding, but they are typically usable as they come. The standard blade front\/notch rear is perfectly adequate for most shooters with decent eyesight out to 75 yards and farther, if necessary. Most can be easily adjusted out to 100 yards and used without expensive aftermarket products. If you do want refinements, an aperture rear can help with distances and a white-outline front blade, or a gold bead, can help line things up in darker lighting. Various methods of mounting scopes exist, with Marlins and Brownings being the easiest as they come pre-drilled and tapped for an optic. Indoors, a scope works against you and outdoors it can work for you, but it tends to slow down target acquisition. A good set of iron sights can put you right on target, right now, and that\u2019s important in close-up encounters.\n\nMost classic lever guns use under-barrel tube magazines, from the traditional side-loading Winchester to the \u201crimfire style\u201d on many .22 lever actions and on the Henry<\/a> rimfires and centerfires, where rounds are loaded through a port in the forward section of the magazine tube itself. The Browning BLR uses a detachable box magazine. In the most common home-defense context, there\u2019s no real advantage to any of these types since you\u2019re not looking at speed reloads anyway.\n\nIn the heavier calibers, consider a good recoil pad, if the new carbine doesn\u2019t already have one. The .30-30 is a fairly mild round for a rifle, but its stock design can punch a shoulder smartly with a solid steel or composite buttplate. Same with the .44 Mag caliber. You\u2019ll get more cooperation in learning and practice from family members if you reduce the \u201couch\u201d factor going in.\n\nThreat Takedown<\/strong>\n\n\"lever-action-rifles-7\"\n\nLearn how to work your home with your new lever gun once you make your choice. Take corners wide, where possible. Don\u2019t walk into a room or round a blind corner barrel-first\u2014you don\u2019t know who might be there to grab it. Don\u2019t round a close corner muzzle-up, it\u2019s too easy for an intruder to deflect the barrel or disarm you entirely. Navigate tight corners and doorways muzzle-down, making the gun harder to grab or deflect, and you can simply drop to one knee while pivoting the barrel up and firing if it is grabbed. Remember, the carbine can also make a very effective impact weapon, but make absolutely sure anybody using it understands whatever safety mechanism it may have. Simple, fast, light, reliable and affordable, the lever action still has a place.\n\nRELATED STORY: 15 New Guns and Accessories in the \"Old West\"<\/a><\/strong>","post_title":"Lifesaving Lever-Action Rifles For Home Defense","post_excerpt":"These classic lever-action rifles deliver reliable home-defense firepower when it matters most!","post_status":"publish","comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","post_password":"","post_name":"lifesaving-lever-action-rifles-for-home-defense","to_ping":"","pinged":"\nhttps:\/\/gunsoftheoldwest.com\/2015\/04\/15-new-guns-and-accessories-in-the-old-west\/","post_modified":"2023-05-31 12:06:26","post_modified_gmt":"2023-05-31 12:06:26","post_content_filtered":"","post_parent":0,"guid":"https:\/\/www.dev.athlonoutdoors.com\/2015\/05\/28\/lifesaving-lever-action-rifles-for-home-defense\/","menu_order":0,"post_type":"post","post_mime_type":"","comment_count":"0","filter":"raw"},{"ID":109242,"post_author":"303","post_date":"2015-05-25 09:00:37","post_date_gmt":"2015-05-25 13:00:37","post_content":"\n\nThe lever-action rifle is alive and doing quite well among both domestic and foreign makers, and there\u2019s a wide field to choose from in selecting one for home-defense use. Imagine what you want it to do before you go shopping around. The centerfire models will have a fair amount of crossover in serving both the home front and the hunting camp, if that\u2019s important to you, and you can obviously stretch your money farther by extending the dual utility of a true rifle caliber. The so-called pistol-caliber lever guns have the advantage of less recoil and ammunition commonality with handguns that might be in the house, and in any of the magnum calibers they\u2019re still no slouch. With practical ranges out to 150 yards and more in the hands of a good shooter, they can also easily handle both defense and hunting chores within their practical limitations. See the gallery above to learn about six manufacturers selling lever-action rifles.\n\n \n\nFor More Information<\/strong>\n\nWinchester\nhttp:\/\/www.winchesterguns.com<\/a>\n\nMarlin Firearms\nhttp:\/\/www.marlinfirearms.com<\/a>\n\nBrowning\nhttp:\/\/www.browning.com<\/a>\n\nHenry Repeating Arms\nhttp:\/\/www.henryrifles.com<\/a>\n\nMossberg\nhttp:\/\/www.mossberg.com<\/a>\n\nRossi USA\nhttp:\/\/www.rossiusa.com<\/a>\n\n \n\nRelated Stories<\/strong>\n\n4 New Old West Guns For 2015<\/a>\n\nNew For 2015: Browning AB3 Hunter Rifle<\/a>\n\nNew For 2015: Winchester XPR Bolt-Action Rifle<\/a>\n\nNew Sporting Rifles for 2014 | Varmint, Hunting & Long-Range Roundup<\/a>\n\nGun Review: Mossberg\u2019s Duck Commanders<\/a>","post_title":"6 Manufacturers Selling Lever-Action Rifles For Home Defense Or Hunting","post_excerpt":"There's a wide field of both domestic and foreign manufacturers offering lever-action rifles for home defense and hunting.","post_status":"publish","comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","post_password":"","post_name":"6-manufacturers-selling-lever-action-rifles-for-home-defense-or-hunting","to_ping":"","pinged":"https:\/\/www.personaldefenseworld.com\/2015\/04\/4-new-old-west-guns-for-2015\/#4-new-old-west-guns-for-2015\nhttps:\/\/www.personaldefenseworld.com\/2015\/02\/new-2015-browning-ab3-hunter-rifle\/\nhttps:\/\/www.personaldefenseworld.com\/2015\/01\/new-2015-winchester-xpr-bolt-action-rifle\/\nhttps:\/\/www.tactical-life.com\/firearms\/new-sporting-rifles-for-2014\/","post_modified":"2023-05-31 12:06:54","post_modified_gmt":"2023-05-31 12:06:54","post_content_filtered":"","post_parent":0,"guid":"https:\/\/www.dev.athlonoutdoors.com\/2015\/05\/25\/6-manufacturers-selling-lever-action-rifles-for-home-defense-or-hunting\/","menu_order":0,"post_type":"post","post_mime_type":"","comment_count":"0","filter":"raw"}],"next":false,"prev":true,"total_page":12},"paged":1,"column_class":"jeg_col_2o3","class":"jnews_block_23"};

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\n
\"Dakota<\/figure>\n\n\n\n

This is the Cadillac of takedown rifles. The Traveler is available in three grades\u2014 Classic, Safari and African\u2014and you can choose from a limitless array of upgrades. This rifle has a unique takedown system that offers threadless assembly and disassembly. It\u2019s available in calibers from .22-250 to .450 Dakota. Lastly is MSRP, which comes in at $8,890. For even more info, please visit dakotaarms.com<\/a>.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

Sauer 202 Take Down<\/h4>\n\n\n\n
\"Sauer
This rifle raises the bar on standard takedown rifles. It has a solid action with a receiver that can accommodate all calibers from 6.5x55mm up to the massive .458 Lott. Numerous options and calibers are available, including beautifully figured stocks of grade 4 Turkish walnut. MSRP: 6,333 to $10,607. <\/figcaption><\/figure>\n\n\n\n

This rifle raises the bar on standard takedown rifles. It has a solid action with a receiver that can accommodate all calibers from 6.5x55mm up to the massive .458 Lott. Numerous options and calibers are available, including beautifully figured stocks of grade 4 Turkish walnut. MSRP can get up there, ranging from $6,333 to $10,607. For even more info, please visit sauer.de\/en<\/a>.<\/p>\n","post_title":"6 High-Quality Takedown Rifles for Easy Transport","post_excerpt":"","post_status":"publish","comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","post_password":"","post_name":"best-takedown-rifles","to_ping":"","pinged":"","post_modified":"2023-10-31 22:40:55","post_modified_gmt":"2023-11-01 02:40:55","post_content_filtered":"","post_parent":0,"guid":"https:\/\/www.dev.athlonoutdoors.com\/2015\/08\/26\/best-takedown-rifles\/","menu_order":0,"post_type":"post","post_mime_type":"","comment_count":"0","filter":"raw"},{"ID":109186,"post_author":"303","post_date":"2015-05-28 09:45:25","post_date_gmt":"2015-05-28 13:45:25","post_content":"\n\nOne of the greatest fallacies for those looking to upgrade or augment their home defense arsenal with a new long gun is the idea that you can\u2019t possibly defend your hearth and homestead without military-grade hardware, sophisticated optics and a 200-round drum magazine. Statistics, and reality, argue against that concept in terms of absolute requirements for repelling borders and defending castle walls. Do you typically need to blow off 200 rounds in a single in-home encounter or shoot the wings off a gnat at 300 yards? Nope. Do you really need to be lugging a 12-pound defensive package around the house? No again. So, what do you need?\n\nFirst off, as with any tool, look at the job the tool needs to do. Forget hordes of angry villagers with torches at the gates, or even herds of innocent zombies just out for a midnight snack. The statistical norm for a home \u201cattack\u201d is one or two people attempting to break in for one of three reasons: intoxication, anger or theft. These run anywhere from the drunk mistaking your home for somebody else\u2019s, the ex-boyfriend out for revenge, the classic (and random) middle-of-the-night burglar and the organized home invasion. With the exception of the more \u201ctargeted\u201d home invasion, most threats to the occupants are not particularly well thought out, not highly organized and not normally carried out by more than one or two hostiles. Most are close up, do not involve either extended timeframes or extended distances and do not burn up truckloads of ammunition.\n\nAn apartment dweller would rarely be shooting 300 yards in defense of wife and child, and the family living in a quiet suburban cul-de-sac is unlikely to need to shoot beyond the boundaries of either front yard or back fence. Obviously, the remote ranch house an hour from the nearest 911 response is a different matter, but for the majority of us, the home-defense rifle simply doesn\u2019t have to be a heavy, high-capacity, credit-card buster.\n\n\"lever-action, A tall gold bead like this Marbles Carbine Blade comes standard on some lever guns and can be ordered from Brownells.[\/caption]\n\nGiven all that, why do we even want a rifle in the first place? There are several reasons\u2014a rifle tends to be more powerful than a handgun (even when firing handgun ammunition because of velocity gains through longer barrels), it\u2019s frequently easier for many to shoot well at varying distances than a handgun, it extends the practical range over a handgun, it can be more intimidating to an intruder than the average handgun, and the right rifle can be relatively quick for even a non-gunnie to learn and operate effectively.\n\nRELATED STORY: 6 Manufacturers Selling Lever-Action Rifles For Home Defense Or Hunting<\/a><\/strong>\n\nIn choosing your rifle priority one is reliability. It has to function, should be simple to operate and should not be subject to ammo sensitivity against a wide range of brands and bullet types. Priority two is power, which should be in a \u201cserious\u201d caliber, such as .38 Special on up. And priority three, believe it or not, brings accuracy in last. It\u2019s nice to be able to hit a marauding gnat at 300 yards, but in most cases if your home-defense rifle can hold inside 4 inches at 100 yards, it\u2019ll be good enough.\n\nAll of this leads up, as you\u2019ve noticed, to the humble lever-action rifle as a candidate for your home-defense arsenal.\n\nThere\u2019s nothing wrong with the idea of a lever action, however archaic you perceive it to be. The repeating lever action rifle in many calibers, several models and multiple configurations was one of the original home-defense tools for much of the Western half of the U.S. for well over half a century, where it was just as effective in that role as it was in the hands of generations of hunters who brought home food for the table using it.\n\n\"lever-action, One of the advantages of a lever action is that you can tell at a glance if it\u2019s cocked or not.[\/caption]\n\nThe design is simple to learn: Fill it up through the loading gate, work the lever to chamber a round, cock the hammer, pull the trigger to fire, repeat as necessary. No separate magazines to lose or have fail to seat completely, no complicated controls to remember, no scope to knock loose, fog, or blur out at inside-the-house distances, no dead batteries, and less chance of \u201cspray-and-pray\u201d shooting as opposed to the average semi-auto like an AK-47 or AR-15.\n\nMagazine capacity, of course, is much less, but six to 10 rounds in a lever gun should easily handle 95 percent of the home-defense scenarios most of us are likely to encounter.\n\nWhich one should you choose? Look in your gun safe. You may already have what you need, whether it\u2019s Grandpa\u2019s old hand-me-down Winchester<\/a> in .30-30, a modern Browning BLR<\/a> in .308 Winchester, or even your Cowboy Action Shooting competition Marlin<\/a> or Uberti<\/a>. If not, evaluate your layout and decide whether you want the additional power and range for both indoor and outdoor applications of a centerfire rifle cartridge like the .30-30 or .308, or if a handgun caliber that\u2019ll be softer on the eardrums indoors while still easily carrying 50 or 75 yards outdoors would be a better choice.\n\nFor some, the utility of stockpiling one load for rifle and handgun, like the .357 Mag or .45 Colt, is a further consideration. For others, the ability of family members to tolerate recoil is a factor, and while I do recommend something heavier, in such cases the rimfires in .22 LR, .22 Mag and the hotter .17 calibers may be a better choice with no disconcerting recoil or extreme muzzle blast. My wife has two much-beloved Marlin 1894s<\/a> in .32-20 from her cowboy competition days. She knows them intimately, she shoots them better than anything else in the vault, and in her case, she\u2019d be far better off with her Marlins than with any of my tricked-out AR-15s if it came to somebody kicking our front door in.\n\nClose Quarters<\/strong>\n\n\"lever-action, \u201cShorter barrels can shoot every bit as accurately as longer barrels, and they maneuver infinitely better through tight confines\u2026 \u201d[\/caption]\n\nIndoor practicality dictates a short barrel. Shorter barrels can shoot every bit as accurately as longer barrels, and they maneuver infinitely better through tight confines and angles if you have to. The general recommendation in case of loud noises in the middle of the night is to congregate with a phone in one defensible location in the home while waiting for the sirens, but sometimes you have to do what you have to do, and a short, light, handy lever-action carbine just navigates easier all the way round than a longer barrel does. I do own Grandpa\u2019s old Winchester Model 94<\/a> in .30-30, and its 20-inch barrel is the longest I\u2019d go on a home-defense carbine by choice. I also have a 24-inch Marlin 1894 in .45 Colt that I could tolerate reasonably well, if it was all I had. Keep in mind that octagonal barrels will be heavier than round, and the shorter you go the less magazine capacity. There\u2019s no absolute, so buy what works best for you, or use what you already have if money\u2019s tight.\n\nRELATED STORY: Uberti\u2019s Silverboy Lever-Action Rifle in .22 LR<\/a><\/strong>\n\nLever action sights may not be outstanding, but they are typically usable as they come. The standard blade front\/notch rear is perfectly adequate for most shooters with decent eyesight out to 75 yards and farther, if necessary. Most can be easily adjusted out to 100 yards and used without expensive aftermarket products. If you do want refinements, an aperture rear can help with distances and a white-outline front blade, or a gold bead, can help line things up in darker lighting. Various methods of mounting scopes exist, with Marlins and Brownings being the easiest as they come pre-drilled and tapped for an optic. Indoors, a scope works against you and outdoors it can work for you, but it tends to slow down target acquisition. A good set of iron sights can put you right on target, right now, and that\u2019s important in close-up encounters.\n\nMost classic lever guns use under-barrel tube magazines, from the traditional side-loading Winchester to the \u201crimfire style\u201d on many .22 lever actions and on the Henry<\/a> rimfires and centerfires, where rounds are loaded through a port in the forward section of the magazine tube itself. The Browning BLR uses a detachable box magazine. In the most common home-defense context, there\u2019s no real advantage to any of these types since you\u2019re not looking at speed reloads anyway.\n\nIn the heavier calibers, consider a good recoil pad, if the new carbine doesn\u2019t already have one. The .30-30 is a fairly mild round for a rifle, but its stock design can punch a shoulder smartly with a solid steel or composite buttplate. Same with the .44 Mag caliber. You\u2019ll get more cooperation in learning and practice from family members if you reduce the \u201couch\u201d factor going in.\n\nThreat Takedown<\/strong>\n\n\"lever-action-rifles-7\"\n\nLearn how to work your home with your new lever gun once you make your choice. Take corners wide, where possible. Don\u2019t walk into a room or round a blind corner barrel-first\u2014you don\u2019t know who might be there to grab it. Don\u2019t round a close corner muzzle-up, it\u2019s too easy for an intruder to deflect the barrel or disarm you entirely. Navigate tight corners and doorways muzzle-down, making the gun harder to grab or deflect, and you can simply drop to one knee while pivoting the barrel up and firing if it is grabbed. Remember, the carbine can also make a very effective impact weapon, but make absolutely sure anybody using it understands whatever safety mechanism it may have. Simple, fast, light, reliable and affordable, the lever action still has a place.\n\nRELATED STORY: 15 New Guns and Accessories in the \"Old West\"<\/a><\/strong>","post_title":"Lifesaving Lever-Action Rifles For Home Defense","post_excerpt":"These classic lever-action rifles deliver reliable home-defense firepower when it matters most!","post_status":"publish","comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","post_password":"","post_name":"lifesaving-lever-action-rifles-for-home-defense","to_ping":"","pinged":"\nhttps:\/\/gunsoftheoldwest.com\/2015\/04\/15-new-guns-and-accessories-in-the-old-west\/","post_modified":"2023-05-31 12:06:26","post_modified_gmt":"2023-05-31 12:06:26","post_content_filtered":"","post_parent":0,"guid":"https:\/\/www.dev.athlonoutdoors.com\/2015\/05\/28\/lifesaving-lever-action-rifles-for-home-defense\/","menu_order":0,"post_type":"post","post_mime_type":"","comment_count":"0","filter":"raw"},{"ID":109242,"post_author":"303","post_date":"2015-05-25 09:00:37","post_date_gmt":"2015-05-25 13:00:37","post_content":"\n\nThe lever-action rifle is alive and doing quite well among both domestic and foreign makers, and there\u2019s a wide field to choose from in selecting one for home-defense use. Imagine what you want it to do before you go shopping around. The centerfire models will have a fair amount of crossover in serving both the home front and the hunting camp, if that\u2019s important to you, and you can obviously stretch your money farther by extending the dual utility of a true rifle caliber. The so-called pistol-caliber lever guns have the advantage of less recoil and ammunition commonality with handguns that might be in the house, and in any of the magnum calibers they\u2019re still no slouch. With practical ranges out to 150 yards and more in the hands of a good shooter, they can also easily handle both defense and hunting chores within their practical limitations. See the gallery above to learn about six manufacturers selling lever-action rifles.\n\n \n\nFor More Information<\/strong>\n\nWinchester\nhttp:\/\/www.winchesterguns.com<\/a>\n\nMarlin Firearms\nhttp:\/\/www.marlinfirearms.com<\/a>\n\nBrowning\nhttp:\/\/www.browning.com<\/a>\n\nHenry Repeating Arms\nhttp:\/\/www.henryrifles.com<\/a>\n\nMossberg\nhttp:\/\/www.mossberg.com<\/a>\n\nRossi USA\nhttp:\/\/www.rossiusa.com<\/a>\n\n \n\nRelated Stories<\/strong>\n\n4 New Old West Guns For 2015<\/a>\n\nNew For 2015: Browning AB3 Hunter Rifle<\/a>\n\nNew For 2015: Winchester XPR Bolt-Action Rifle<\/a>\n\nNew Sporting Rifles for 2014 | Varmint, Hunting & Long-Range Roundup<\/a>\n\nGun Review: Mossberg\u2019s Duck Commanders<\/a>","post_title":"6 Manufacturers Selling Lever-Action Rifles For Home Defense Or Hunting","post_excerpt":"There's a wide field of both domestic and foreign manufacturers offering lever-action rifles for home defense and hunting.","post_status":"publish","comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","post_password":"","post_name":"6-manufacturers-selling-lever-action-rifles-for-home-defense-or-hunting","to_ping":"","pinged":"https:\/\/www.personaldefenseworld.com\/2015\/04\/4-new-old-west-guns-for-2015\/#4-new-old-west-guns-for-2015\nhttps:\/\/www.personaldefenseworld.com\/2015\/02\/new-2015-browning-ab3-hunter-rifle\/\nhttps:\/\/www.personaldefenseworld.com\/2015\/01\/new-2015-winchester-xpr-bolt-action-rifle\/\nhttps:\/\/www.tactical-life.com\/firearms\/new-sporting-rifles-for-2014\/","post_modified":"2023-05-31 12:06:54","post_modified_gmt":"2023-05-31 12:06:54","post_content_filtered":"","post_parent":0,"guid":"https:\/\/www.dev.athlonoutdoors.com\/2015\/05\/25\/6-manufacturers-selling-lever-action-rifles-for-home-defense-or-hunting\/","menu_order":0,"post_type":"post","post_mime_type":"","comment_count":"0","filter":"raw"}],"next":false,"prev":true,"total_page":12},"paged":1,"column_class":"jeg_col_2o3","class":"jnews_block_23"};

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\n

Dakota Arms Model 76 Traveler<\/h4>\n\n\n\n
\"Dakota<\/figure>\n\n\n\n

This is the Cadillac of takedown rifles. The Traveler is available in three grades\u2014 Classic, Safari and African\u2014and you can choose from a limitless array of upgrades. This rifle has a unique takedown system that offers threadless assembly and disassembly. It\u2019s available in calibers from .22-250 to .450 Dakota. Lastly is MSRP, which comes in at $8,890. For even more info, please visit dakotaarms.com<\/a>.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

Sauer 202 Take Down<\/h4>\n\n\n\n
\"Sauer
This rifle raises the bar on standard takedown rifles. It has a solid action with a receiver that can accommodate all calibers from 6.5x55mm up to the massive .458 Lott. Numerous options and calibers are available, including beautifully figured stocks of grade 4 Turkish walnut. MSRP: 6,333 to $10,607. <\/figcaption><\/figure>\n\n\n\n

This rifle raises the bar on standard takedown rifles. It has a solid action with a receiver that can accommodate all calibers from 6.5x55mm up to the massive .458 Lott. Numerous options and calibers are available, including beautifully figured stocks of grade 4 Turkish walnut. MSRP can get up there, ranging from $6,333 to $10,607. For even more info, please visit sauer.de\/en<\/a>.<\/p>\n","post_title":"6 High-Quality Takedown Rifles for Easy Transport","post_excerpt":"","post_status":"publish","comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","post_password":"","post_name":"best-takedown-rifles","to_ping":"","pinged":"","post_modified":"2023-10-31 22:40:55","post_modified_gmt":"2023-11-01 02:40:55","post_content_filtered":"","post_parent":0,"guid":"https:\/\/www.dev.athlonoutdoors.com\/2015\/08\/26\/best-takedown-rifles\/","menu_order":0,"post_type":"post","post_mime_type":"","comment_count":"0","filter":"raw"},{"ID":109186,"post_author":"303","post_date":"2015-05-28 09:45:25","post_date_gmt":"2015-05-28 13:45:25","post_content":"\n\nOne of the greatest fallacies for those looking to upgrade or augment their home defense arsenal with a new long gun is the idea that you can\u2019t possibly defend your hearth and homestead without military-grade hardware, sophisticated optics and a 200-round drum magazine. Statistics, and reality, argue against that concept in terms of absolute requirements for repelling borders and defending castle walls. Do you typically need to blow off 200 rounds in a single in-home encounter or shoot the wings off a gnat at 300 yards? Nope. Do you really need to be lugging a 12-pound defensive package around the house? No again. So, what do you need?\n\nFirst off, as with any tool, look at the job the tool needs to do. Forget hordes of angry villagers with torches at the gates, or even herds of innocent zombies just out for a midnight snack. The statistical norm for a home \u201cattack\u201d is one or two people attempting to break in for one of three reasons: intoxication, anger or theft. These run anywhere from the drunk mistaking your home for somebody else\u2019s, the ex-boyfriend out for revenge, the classic (and random) middle-of-the-night burglar and the organized home invasion. With the exception of the more \u201ctargeted\u201d home invasion, most threats to the occupants are not particularly well thought out, not highly organized and not normally carried out by more than one or two hostiles. Most are close up, do not involve either extended timeframes or extended distances and do not burn up truckloads of ammunition.\n\nAn apartment dweller would rarely be shooting 300 yards in defense of wife and child, and the family living in a quiet suburban cul-de-sac is unlikely to need to shoot beyond the boundaries of either front yard or back fence. Obviously, the remote ranch house an hour from the nearest 911 response is a different matter, but for the majority of us, the home-defense rifle simply doesn\u2019t have to be a heavy, high-capacity, credit-card buster.\n\n\"lever-action, A tall gold bead like this Marbles Carbine Blade comes standard on some lever guns and can be ordered from Brownells.[\/caption]\n\nGiven all that, why do we even want a rifle in the first place? There are several reasons\u2014a rifle tends to be more powerful than a handgun (even when firing handgun ammunition because of velocity gains through longer barrels), it\u2019s frequently easier for many to shoot well at varying distances than a handgun, it extends the practical range over a handgun, it can be more intimidating to an intruder than the average handgun, and the right rifle can be relatively quick for even a non-gunnie to learn and operate effectively.\n\nRELATED STORY: 6 Manufacturers Selling Lever-Action Rifles For Home Defense Or Hunting<\/a><\/strong>\n\nIn choosing your rifle priority one is reliability. It has to function, should be simple to operate and should not be subject to ammo sensitivity against a wide range of brands and bullet types. Priority two is power, which should be in a \u201cserious\u201d caliber, such as .38 Special on up. And priority three, believe it or not, brings accuracy in last. It\u2019s nice to be able to hit a marauding gnat at 300 yards, but in most cases if your home-defense rifle can hold inside 4 inches at 100 yards, it\u2019ll be good enough.\n\nAll of this leads up, as you\u2019ve noticed, to the humble lever-action rifle as a candidate for your home-defense arsenal.\n\nThere\u2019s nothing wrong with the idea of a lever action, however archaic you perceive it to be. The repeating lever action rifle in many calibers, several models and multiple configurations was one of the original home-defense tools for much of the Western half of the U.S. for well over half a century, where it was just as effective in that role as it was in the hands of generations of hunters who brought home food for the table using it.\n\n\"lever-action, One of the advantages of a lever action is that you can tell at a glance if it\u2019s cocked or not.[\/caption]\n\nThe design is simple to learn: Fill it up through the loading gate, work the lever to chamber a round, cock the hammer, pull the trigger to fire, repeat as necessary. No separate magazines to lose or have fail to seat completely, no complicated controls to remember, no scope to knock loose, fog, or blur out at inside-the-house distances, no dead batteries, and less chance of \u201cspray-and-pray\u201d shooting as opposed to the average semi-auto like an AK-47 or AR-15.\n\nMagazine capacity, of course, is much less, but six to 10 rounds in a lever gun should easily handle 95 percent of the home-defense scenarios most of us are likely to encounter.\n\nWhich one should you choose? Look in your gun safe. You may already have what you need, whether it\u2019s Grandpa\u2019s old hand-me-down Winchester<\/a> in .30-30, a modern Browning BLR<\/a> in .308 Winchester, or even your Cowboy Action Shooting competition Marlin<\/a> or Uberti<\/a>. If not, evaluate your layout and decide whether you want the additional power and range for both indoor and outdoor applications of a centerfire rifle cartridge like the .30-30 or .308, or if a handgun caliber that\u2019ll be softer on the eardrums indoors while still easily carrying 50 or 75 yards outdoors would be a better choice.\n\nFor some, the utility of stockpiling one load for rifle and handgun, like the .357 Mag or .45 Colt, is a further consideration. For others, the ability of family members to tolerate recoil is a factor, and while I do recommend something heavier, in such cases the rimfires in .22 LR, .22 Mag and the hotter .17 calibers may be a better choice with no disconcerting recoil or extreme muzzle blast. My wife has two much-beloved Marlin 1894s<\/a> in .32-20 from her cowboy competition days. She knows them intimately, she shoots them better than anything else in the vault, and in her case, she\u2019d be far better off with her Marlins than with any of my tricked-out AR-15s if it came to somebody kicking our front door in.\n\nClose Quarters<\/strong>\n\n\"lever-action, \u201cShorter barrels can shoot every bit as accurately as longer barrels, and they maneuver infinitely better through tight confines\u2026 \u201d[\/caption]\n\nIndoor practicality dictates a short barrel. Shorter barrels can shoot every bit as accurately as longer barrels, and they maneuver infinitely better through tight confines and angles if you have to. The general recommendation in case of loud noises in the middle of the night is to congregate with a phone in one defensible location in the home while waiting for the sirens, but sometimes you have to do what you have to do, and a short, light, handy lever-action carbine just navigates easier all the way round than a longer barrel does. I do own Grandpa\u2019s old Winchester Model 94<\/a> in .30-30, and its 20-inch barrel is the longest I\u2019d go on a home-defense carbine by choice. I also have a 24-inch Marlin 1894 in .45 Colt that I could tolerate reasonably well, if it was all I had. Keep in mind that octagonal barrels will be heavier than round, and the shorter you go the less magazine capacity. There\u2019s no absolute, so buy what works best for you, or use what you already have if money\u2019s tight.\n\nRELATED STORY: Uberti\u2019s Silverboy Lever-Action Rifle in .22 LR<\/a><\/strong>\n\nLever action sights may not be outstanding, but they are typically usable as they come. The standard blade front\/notch rear is perfectly adequate for most shooters with decent eyesight out to 75 yards and farther, if necessary. Most can be easily adjusted out to 100 yards and used without expensive aftermarket products. If you do want refinements, an aperture rear can help with distances and a white-outline front blade, or a gold bead, can help line things up in darker lighting. Various methods of mounting scopes exist, with Marlins and Brownings being the easiest as they come pre-drilled and tapped for an optic. Indoors, a scope works against you and outdoors it can work for you, but it tends to slow down target acquisition. A good set of iron sights can put you right on target, right now, and that\u2019s important in close-up encounters.\n\nMost classic lever guns use under-barrel tube magazines, from the traditional side-loading Winchester to the \u201crimfire style\u201d on many .22 lever actions and on the Henry<\/a> rimfires and centerfires, where rounds are loaded through a port in the forward section of the magazine tube itself. The Browning BLR uses a detachable box magazine. In the most common home-defense context, there\u2019s no real advantage to any of these types since you\u2019re not looking at speed reloads anyway.\n\nIn the heavier calibers, consider a good recoil pad, if the new carbine doesn\u2019t already have one. The .30-30 is a fairly mild round for a rifle, but its stock design can punch a shoulder smartly with a solid steel or composite buttplate. Same with the .44 Mag caliber. You\u2019ll get more cooperation in learning and practice from family members if you reduce the \u201couch\u201d factor going in.\n\nThreat Takedown<\/strong>\n\n\"lever-action-rifles-7\"\n\nLearn how to work your home with your new lever gun once you make your choice. Take corners wide, where possible. Don\u2019t walk into a room or round a blind corner barrel-first\u2014you don\u2019t know who might be there to grab it. Don\u2019t round a close corner muzzle-up, it\u2019s too easy for an intruder to deflect the barrel or disarm you entirely. Navigate tight corners and doorways muzzle-down, making the gun harder to grab or deflect, and you can simply drop to one knee while pivoting the barrel up and firing if it is grabbed. Remember, the carbine can also make a very effective impact weapon, but make absolutely sure anybody using it understands whatever safety mechanism it may have. Simple, fast, light, reliable and affordable, the lever action still has a place.\n\nRELATED STORY: 15 New Guns and Accessories in the \"Old West\"<\/a><\/strong>","post_title":"Lifesaving Lever-Action Rifles For Home Defense","post_excerpt":"These classic lever-action rifles deliver reliable home-defense firepower when it matters most!","post_status":"publish","comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","post_password":"","post_name":"lifesaving-lever-action-rifles-for-home-defense","to_ping":"","pinged":"\nhttps:\/\/gunsoftheoldwest.com\/2015\/04\/15-new-guns-and-accessories-in-the-old-west\/","post_modified":"2023-05-31 12:06:26","post_modified_gmt":"2023-05-31 12:06:26","post_content_filtered":"","post_parent":0,"guid":"https:\/\/www.dev.athlonoutdoors.com\/2015\/05\/28\/lifesaving-lever-action-rifles-for-home-defense\/","menu_order":0,"post_type":"post","post_mime_type":"","comment_count":"0","filter":"raw"},{"ID":109242,"post_author":"303","post_date":"2015-05-25 09:00:37","post_date_gmt":"2015-05-25 13:00:37","post_content":"\n\nThe lever-action rifle is alive and doing quite well among both domestic and foreign makers, and there\u2019s a wide field to choose from in selecting one for home-defense use. Imagine what you want it to do before you go shopping around. The centerfire models will have a fair amount of crossover in serving both the home front and the hunting camp, if that\u2019s important to you, and you can obviously stretch your money farther by extending the dual utility of a true rifle caliber. The so-called pistol-caliber lever guns have the advantage of less recoil and ammunition commonality with handguns that might be in the house, and in any of the magnum calibers they\u2019re still no slouch. With practical ranges out to 150 yards and more in the hands of a good shooter, they can also easily handle both defense and hunting chores within their practical limitations. See the gallery above to learn about six manufacturers selling lever-action rifles.\n\n \n\nFor More Information<\/strong>\n\nWinchester\nhttp:\/\/www.winchesterguns.com<\/a>\n\nMarlin Firearms\nhttp:\/\/www.marlinfirearms.com<\/a>\n\nBrowning\nhttp:\/\/www.browning.com<\/a>\n\nHenry Repeating Arms\nhttp:\/\/www.henryrifles.com<\/a>\n\nMossberg\nhttp:\/\/www.mossberg.com<\/a>\n\nRossi USA\nhttp:\/\/www.rossiusa.com<\/a>\n\n \n\nRelated Stories<\/strong>\n\n4 New Old West Guns For 2015<\/a>\n\nNew For 2015: Browning AB3 Hunter Rifle<\/a>\n\nNew For 2015: Winchester XPR Bolt-Action Rifle<\/a>\n\nNew Sporting Rifles for 2014 | Varmint, Hunting & Long-Range Roundup<\/a>\n\nGun Review: Mossberg\u2019s Duck Commanders<\/a>","post_title":"6 Manufacturers Selling Lever-Action Rifles For Home Defense Or Hunting","post_excerpt":"There's a wide field of both domestic and foreign manufacturers offering lever-action rifles for home defense and hunting.","post_status":"publish","comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","post_password":"","post_name":"6-manufacturers-selling-lever-action-rifles-for-home-defense-or-hunting","to_ping":"","pinged":"https:\/\/www.personaldefenseworld.com\/2015\/04\/4-new-old-west-guns-for-2015\/#4-new-old-west-guns-for-2015\nhttps:\/\/www.personaldefenseworld.com\/2015\/02\/new-2015-browning-ab3-hunter-rifle\/\nhttps:\/\/www.personaldefenseworld.com\/2015\/01\/new-2015-winchester-xpr-bolt-action-rifle\/\nhttps:\/\/www.tactical-life.com\/firearms\/new-sporting-rifles-for-2014\/","post_modified":"2023-05-31 12:06:54","post_modified_gmt":"2023-05-31 12:06:54","post_content_filtered":"","post_parent":0,"guid":"https:\/\/www.dev.athlonoutdoors.com\/2015\/05\/25\/6-manufacturers-selling-lever-action-rifles-for-home-defense-or-hunting\/","menu_order":0,"post_type":"post","post_mime_type":"","comment_count":"0","filter":"raw"}],"next":false,"prev":true,"total_page":12},"paged":1,"column_class":"jeg_col_2o3","class":"jnews_block_23"};

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H-S Precision is bringing the art of the takedown rifle into the modern era. The Pro-Series 2000 is a stainless steel, bolt-action takedown rifle with a 22- to 26-inch match-grade barrel that can be chambered in anything from .204 Ruger to .458 Lott. MSRP is a cool $5,495. For even more info, please visit hsprecision.com<\/a>.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

Dakota Arms Model 76 Traveler<\/h4>\n\n\n\n
\"Dakota<\/figure>\n\n\n\n

This is the Cadillac of takedown rifles. The Traveler is available in three grades\u2014 Classic, Safari and African\u2014and you can choose from a limitless array of upgrades. This rifle has a unique takedown system that offers threadless assembly and disassembly. It\u2019s available in calibers from .22-250 to .450 Dakota. Lastly is MSRP, which comes in at $8,890. For even more info, please visit dakotaarms.com<\/a>.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

Sauer 202 Take Down<\/h4>\n\n\n\n
\"Sauer
This rifle raises the bar on standard takedown rifles. It has a solid action with a receiver that can accommodate all calibers from 6.5x55mm up to the massive .458 Lott. Numerous options and calibers are available, including beautifully figured stocks of grade 4 Turkish walnut. MSRP: 6,333 to $10,607. <\/figcaption><\/figure>\n\n\n\n

This rifle raises the bar on standard takedown rifles. It has a solid action with a receiver that can accommodate all calibers from 6.5x55mm up to the massive .458 Lott. Numerous options and calibers are available, including beautifully figured stocks of grade 4 Turkish walnut. MSRP can get up there, ranging from $6,333 to $10,607. For even more info, please visit sauer.de\/en<\/a>.<\/p>\n","post_title":"6 High-Quality Takedown Rifles for Easy Transport","post_excerpt":"","post_status":"publish","comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","post_password":"","post_name":"best-takedown-rifles","to_ping":"","pinged":"","post_modified":"2023-10-31 22:40:55","post_modified_gmt":"2023-11-01 02:40:55","post_content_filtered":"","post_parent":0,"guid":"https:\/\/www.dev.athlonoutdoors.com\/2015\/08\/26\/best-takedown-rifles\/","menu_order":0,"post_type":"post","post_mime_type":"","comment_count":"0","filter":"raw"},{"ID":109186,"post_author":"303","post_date":"2015-05-28 09:45:25","post_date_gmt":"2015-05-28 13:45:25","post_content":"\n\nOne of the greatest fallacies for those looking to upgrade or augment their home defense arsenal with a new long gun is the idea that you can\u2019t possibly defend your hearth and homestead without military-grade hardware, sophisticated optics and a 200-round drum magazine. Statistics, and reality, argue against that concept in terms of absolute requirements for repelling borders and defending castle walls. Do you typically need to blow off 200 rounds in a single in-home encounter or shoot the wings off a gnat at 300 yards? Nope. Do you really need to be lugging a 12-pound defensive package around the house? No again. So, what do you need?\n\nFirst off, as with any tool, look at the job the tool needs to do. Forget hordes of angry villagers with torches at the gates, or even herds of innocent zombies just out for a midnight snack. The statistical norm for a home \u201cattack\u201d is one or two people attempting to break in for one of three reasons: intoxication, anger or theft. These run anywhere from the drunk mistaking your home for somebody else\u2019s, the ex-boyfriend out for revenge, the classic (and random) middle-of-the-night burglar and the organized home invasion. With the exception of the more \u201ctargeted\u201d home invasion, most threats to the occupants are not particularly well thought out, not highly organized and not normally carried out by more than one or two hostiles. Most are close up, do not involve either extended timeframes or extended distances and do not burn up truckloads of ammunition.\n\nAn apartment dweller would rarely be shooting 300 yards in defense of wife and child, and the family living in a quiet suburban cul-de-sac is unlikely to need to shoot beyond the boundaries of either front yard or back fence. Obviously, the remote ranch house an hour from the nearest 911 response is a different matter, but for the majority of us, the home-defense rifle simply doesn\u2019t have to be a heavy, high-capacity, credit-card buster.\n\n\"lever-action, A tall gold bead like this Marbles Carbine Blade comes standard on some lever guns and can be ordered from Brownells.[\/caption]\n\nGiven all that, why do we even want a rifle in the first place? There are several reasons\u2014a rifle tends to be more powerful than a handgun (even when firing handgun ammunition because of velocity gains through longer barrels), it\u2019s frequently easier for many to shoot well at varying distances than a handgun, it extends the practical range over a handgun, it can be more intimidating to an intruder than the average handgun, and the right rifle can be relatively quick for even a non-gunnie to learn and operate effectively.\n\nRELATED STORY: 6 Manufacturers Selling Lever-Action Rifles For Home Defense Or Hunting<\/a><\/strong>\n\nIn choosing your rifle priority one is reliability. It has to function, should be simple to operate and should not be subject to ammo sensitivity against a wide range of brands and bullet types. Priority two is power, which should be in a \u201cserious\u201d caliber, such as .38 Special on up. And priority three, believe it or not, brings accuracy in last. It\u2019s nice to be able to hit a marauding gnat at 300 yards, but in most cases if your home-defense rifle can hold inside 4 inches at 100 yards, it\u2019ll be good enough.\n\nAll of this leads up, as you\u2019ve noticed, to the humble lever-action rifle as a candidate for your home-defense arsenal.\n\nThere\u2019s nothing wrong with the idea of a lever action, however archaic you perceive it to be. The repeating lever action rifle in many calibers, several models and multiple configurations was one of the original home-defense tools for much of the Western half of the U.S. for well over half a century, where it was just as effective in that role as it was in the hands of generations of hunters who brought home food for the table using it.\n\n\"lever-action, One of the advantages of a lever action is that you can tell at a glance if it\u2019s cocked or not.[\/caption]\n\nThe design is simple to learn: Fill it up through the loading gate, work the lever to chamber a round, cock the hammer, pull the trigger to fire, repeat as necessary. No separate magazines to lose or have fail to seat completely, no complicated controls to remember, no scope to knock loose, fog, or blur out at inside-the-house distances, no dead batteries, and less chance of \u201cspray-and-pray\u201d shooting as opposed to the average semi-auto like an AK-47 or AR-15.\n\nMagazine capacity, of course, is much less, but six to 10 rounds in a lever gun should easily handle 95 percent of the home-defense scenarios most of us are likely to encounter.\n\nWhich one should you choose? Look in your gun safe. You may already have what you need, whether it\u2019s Grandpa\u2019s old hand-me-down Winchester<\/a> in .30-30, a modern Browning BLR<\/a> in .308 Winchester, or even your Cowboy Action Shooting competition Marlin<\/a> or Uberti<\/a>. If not, evaluate your layout and decide whether you want the additional power and range for both indoor and outdoor applications of a centerfire rifle cartridge like the .30-30 or .308, or if a handgun caliber that\u2019ll be softer on the eardrums indoors while still easily carrying 50 or 75 yards outdoors would be a better choice.\n\nFor some, the utility of stockpiling one load for rifle and handgun, like the .357 Mag or .45 Colt, is a further consideration. For others, the ability of family members to tolerate recoil is a factor, and while I do recommend something heavier, in such cases the rimfires in .22 LR, .22 Mag and the hotter .17 calibers may be a better choice with no disconcerting recoil or extreme muzzle blast. My wife has two much-beloved Marlin 1894s<\/a> in .32-20 from her cowboy competition days. She knows them intimately, she shoots them better than anything else in the vault, and in her case, she\u2019d be far better off with her Marlins than with any of my tricked-out AR-15s if it came to somebody kicking our front door in.\n\nClose Quarters<\/strong>\n\n\"lever-action, \u201cShorter barrels can shoot every bit as accurately as longer barrels, and they maneuver infinitely better through tight confines\u2026 \u201d[\/caption]\n\nIndoor practicality dictates a short barrel. Shorter barrels can shoot every bit as accurately as longer barrels, and they maneuver infinitely better through tight confines and angles if you have to. The general recommendation in case of loud noises in the middle of the night is to congregate with a phone in one defensible location in the home while waiting for the sirens, but sometimes you have to do what you have to do, and a short, light, handy lever-action carbine just navigates easier all the way round than a longer barrel does. I do own Grandpa\u2019s old Winchester Model 94<\/a> in .30-30, and its 20-inch barrel is the longest I\u2019d go on a home-defense carbine by choice. I also have a 24-inch Marlin 1894 in .45 Colt that I could tolerate reasonably well, if it was all I had. Keep in mind that octagonal barrels will be heavier than round, and the shorter you go the less magazine capacity. There\u2019s no absolute, so buy what works best for you, or use what you already have if money\u2019s tight.\n\nRELATED STORY: Uberti\u2019s Silverboy Lever-Action Rifle in .22 LR<\/a><\/strong>\n\nLever action sights may not be outstanding, but they are typically usable as they come. The standard blade front\/notch rear is perfectly adequate for most shooters with decent eyesight out to 75 yards and farther, if necessary. Most can be easily adjusted out to 100 yards and used without expensive aftermarket products. If you do want refinements, an aperture rear can help with distances and a white-outline front blade, or a gold bead, can help line things up in darker lighting. Various methods of mounting scopes exist, with Marlins and Brownings being the easiest as they come pre-drilled and tapped for an optic. Indoors, a scope works against you and outdoors it can work for you, but it tends to slow down target acquisition. A good set of iron sights can put you right on target, right now, and that\u2019s important in close-up encounters.\n\nMost classic lever guns use under-barrel tube magazines, from the traditional side-loading Winchester to the \u201crimfire style\u201d on many .22 lever actions and on the Henry<\/a> rimfires and centerfires, where rounds are loaded through a port in the forward section of the magazine tube itself. The Browning BLR uses a detachable box magazine. In the most common home-defense context, there\u2019s no real advantage to any of these types since you\u2019re not looking at speed reloads anyway.\n\nIn the heavier calibers, consider a good recoil pad, if the new carbine doesn\u2019t already have one. The .30-30 is a fairly mild round for a rifle, but its stock design can punch a shoulder smartly with a solid steel or composite buttplate. Same with the .44 Mag caliber. You\u2019ll get more cooperation in learning and practice from family members if you reduce the \u201couch\u201d factor going in.\n\nThreat Takedown<\/strong>\n\n\"lever-action-rifles-7\"\n\nLearn how to work your home with your new lever gun once you make your choice. Take corners wide, where possible. Don\u2019t walk into a room or round a blind corner barrel-first\u2014you don\u2019t know who might be there to grab it. Don\u2019t round a close corner muzzle-up, it\u2019s too easy for an intruder to deflect the barrel or disarm you entirely. Navigate tight corners and doorways muzzle-down, making the gun harder to grab or deflect, and you can simply drop to one knee while pivoting the barrel up and firing if it is grabbed. Remember, the carbine can also make a very effective impact weapon, but make absolutely sure anybody using it understands whatever safety mechanism it may have. Simple, fast, light, reliable and affordable, the lever action still has a place.\n\nRELATED STORY: 15 New Guns and Accessories in the \"Old West\"<\/a><\/strong>","post_title":"Lifesaving Lever-Action Rifles For Home Defense","post_excerpt":"These classic lever-action rifles deliver reliable home-defense firepower when it matters most!","post_status":"publish","comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","post_password":"","post_name":"lifesaving-lever-action-rifles-for-home-defense","to_ping":"","pinged":"\nhttps:\/\/gunsoftheoldwest.com\/2015\/04\/15-new-guns-and-accessories-in-the-old-west\/","post_modified":"2023-05-31 12:06:26","post_modified_gmt":"2023-05-31 12:06:26","post_content_filtered":"","post_parent":0,"guid":"https:\/\/www.dev.athlonoutdoors.com\/2015\/05\/28\/lifesaving-lever-action-rifles-for-home-defense\/","menu_order":0,"post_type":"post","post_mime_type":"","comment_count":"0","filter":"raw"},{"ID":109242,"post_author":"303","post_date":"2015-05-25 09:00:37","post_date_gmt":"2015-05-25 13:00:37","post_content":"\n\nThe lever-action rifle is alive and doing quite well among both domestic and foreign makers, and there\u2019s a wide field to choose from in selecting one for home-defense use. Imagine what you want it to do before you go shopping around. The centerfire models will have a fair amount of crossover in serving both the home front and the hunting camp, if that\u2019s important to you, and you can obviously stretch your money farther by extending the dual utility of a true rifle caliber. The so-called pistol-caliber lever guns have the advantage of less recoil and ammunition commonality with handguns that might be in the house, and in any of the magnum calibers they\u2019re still no slouch. With practical ranges out to 150 yards and more in the hands of a good shooter, they can also easily handle both defense and hunting chores within their practical limitations. See the gallery above to learn about six manufacturers selling lever-action rifles.\n\n \n\nFor More Information<\/strong>\n\nWinchester\nhttp:\/\/www.winchesterguns.com<\/a>\n\nMarlin Firearms\nhttp:\/\/www.marlinfirearms.com<\/a>\n\nBrowning\nhttp:\/\/www.browning.com<\/a>\n\nHenry Repeating Arms\nhttp:\/\/www.henryrifles.com<\/a>\n\nMossberg\nhttp:\/\/www.mossberg.com<\/a>\n\nRossi USA\nhttp:\/\/www.rossiusa.com<\/a>\n\n \n\nRelated Stories<\/strong>\n\n4 New Old West Guns For 2015<\/a>\n\nNew For 2015: Browning AB3 Hunter Rifle<\/a>\n\nNew For 2015: Winchester XPR Bolt-Action Rifle<\/a>\n\nNew Sporting Rifles for 2014 | Varmint, Hunting & Long-Range Roundup<\/a>\n\nGun Review: Mossberg\u2019s Duck Commanders<\/a>","post_title":"6 Manufacturers Selling Lever-Action Rifles For Home Defense Or Hunting","post_excerpt":"There's a wide field of both domestic and foreign manufacturers offering lever-action rifles for home defense and hunting.","post_status":"publish","comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","post_password":"","post_name":"6-manufacturers-selling-lever-action-rifles-for-home-defense-or-hunting","to_ping":"","pinged":"https:\/\/www.personaldefenseworld.com\/2015\/04\/4-new-old-west-guns-for-2015\/#4-new-old-west-guns-for-2015\nhttps:\/\/www.personaldefenseworld.com\/2015\/02\/new-2015-browning-ab3-hunter-rifle\/\nhttps:\/\/www.personaldefenseworld.com\/2015\/01\/new-2015-winchester-xpr-bolt-action-rifle\/\nhttps:\/\/www.tactical-life.com\/firearms\/new-sporting-rifles-for-2014\/","post_modified":"2023-05-31 12:06:54","post_modified_gmt":"2023-05-31 12:06:54","post_content_filtered":"","post_parent":0,"guid":"https:\/\/www.dev.athlonoutdoors.com\/2015\/05\/25\/6-manufacturers-selling-lever-action-rifles-for-home-defense-or-hunting\/","menu_order":0,"post_type":"post","post_mime_type":"","comment_count":"0","filter":"raw"}],"next":false,"prev":true,"total_page":12},"paged":1,"column_class":"jeg_col_2o3","class":"jnews_block_23"};

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\n
\"H-S
H-S Precision is bringing the art of the takedown rifle into the\nmodern era. The Pro-Series 2000 is a stainless steel, bolt-action takedown\nrifle with a 22- to 26-inch match-grade barrel that can be chambered in anything from .204 Ruger to .458 Lott. MSRP $5,495. <\/figcaption><\/figure>\n\n\n\n

H-S Precision is bringing the art of the takedown rifle into the modern era. The Pro-Series 2000 is a stainless steel, bolt-action takedown rifle with a 22- to 26-inch match-grade barrel that can be chambered in anything from .204 Ruger to .458 Lott. MSRP is a cool $5,495. For even more info, please visit hsprecision.com<\/a>.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

Dakota Arms Model 76 Traveler<\/h4>\n\n\n\n
\"Dakota<\/figure>\n\n\n\n

This is the Cadillac of takedown rifles. The Traveler is available in three grades\u2014 Classic, Safari and African\u2014and you can choose from a limitless array of upgrades. This rifle has a unique takedown system that offers threadless assembly and disassembly. It\u2019s available in calibers from .22-250 to .450 Dakota. Lastly is MSRP, which comes in at $8,890. For even more info, please visit dakotaarms.com<\/a>.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

Sauer 202 Take Down<\/h4>\n\n\n\n
\"Sauer
This rifle raises the bar on standard takedown rifles. It has a solid action with a receiver that can accommodate all calibers from 6.5x55mm up to the massive .458 Lott. Numerous options and calibers are available, including beautifully figured stocks of grade 4 Turkish walnut. MSRP: 6,333 to $10,607. <\/figcaption><\/figure>\n\n\n\n

This rifle raises the bar on standard takedown rifles. It has a solid action with a receiver that can accommodate all calibers from 6.5x55mm up to the massive .458 Lott. Numerous options and calibers are available, including beautifully figured stocks of grade 4 Turkish walnut. MSRP can get up there, ranging from $6,333 to $10,607. For even more info, please visit sauer.de\/en<\/a>.<\/p>\n","post_title":"6 High-Quality Takedown Rifles for Easy Transport","post_excerpt":"","post_status":"publish","comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","post_password":"","post_name":"best-takedown-rifles","to_ping":"","pinged":"","post_modified":"2023-10-31 22:40:55","post_modified_gmt":"2023-11-01 02:40:55","post_content_filtered":"","post_parent":0,"guid":"https:\/\/www.dev.athlonoutdoors.com\/2015\/08\/26\/best-takedown-rifles\/","menu_order":0,"post_type":"post","post_mime_type":"","comment_count":"0","filter":"raw"},{"ID":109186,"post_author":"303","post_date":"2015-05-28 09:45:25","post_date_gmt":"2015-05-28 13:45:25","post_content":"\n\nOne of the greatest fallacies for those looking to upgrade or augment their home defense arsenal with a new long gun is the idea that you can\u2019t possibly defend your hearth and homestead without military-grade hardware, sophisticated optics and a 200-round drum magazine. Statistics, and reality, argue against that concept in terms of absolute requirements for repelling borders and defending castle walls. Do you typically need to blow off 200 rounds in a single in-home encounter or shoot the wings off a gnat at 300 yards? Nope. Do you really need to be lugging a 12-pound defensive package around the house? No again. So, what do you need?\n\nFirst off, as with any tool, look at the job the tool needs to do. Forget hordes of angry villagers with torches at the gates, or even herds of innocent zombies just out for a midnight snack. The statistical norm for a home \u201cattack\u201d is one or two people attempting to break in for one of three reasons: intoxication, anger or theft. These run anywhere from the drunk mistaking your home for somebody else\u2019s, the ex-boyfriend out for revenge, the classic (and random) middle-of-the-night burglar and the organized home invasion. With the exception of the more \u201ctargeted\u201d home invasion, most threats to the occupants are not particularly well thought out, not highly organized and not normally carried out by more than one or two hostiles. Most are close up, do not involve either extended timeframes or extended distances and do not burn up truckloads of ammunition.\n\nAn apartment dweller would rarely be shooting 300 yards in defense of wife and child, and the family living in a quiet suburban cul-de-sac is unlikely to need to shoot beyond the boundaries of either front yard or back fence. Obviously, the remote ranch house an hour from the nearest 911 response is a different matter, but for the majority of us, the home-defense rifle simply doesn\u2019t have to be a heavy, high-capacity, credit-card buster.\n\n\"lever-action, A tall gold bead like this Marbles Carbine Blade comes standard on some lever guns and can be ordered from Brownells.[\/caption]\n\nGiven all that, why do we even want a rifle in the first place? There are several reasons\u2014a rifle tends to be more powerful than a handgun (even when firing handgun ammunition because of velocity gains through longer barrels), it\u2019s frequently easier for many to shoot well at varying distances than a handgun, it extends the practical range over a handgun, it can be more intimidating to an intruder than the average handgun, and the right rifle can be relatively quick for even a non-gunnie to learn and operate effectively.\n\nRELATED STORY: 6 Manufacturers Selling Lever-Action Rifles For Home Defense Or Hunting<\/a><\/strong>\n\nIn choosing your rifle priority one is reliability. It has to function, should be simple to operate and should not be subject to ammo sensitivity against a wide range of brands and bullet types. Priority two is power, which should be in a \u201cserious\u201d caliber, such as .38 Special on up. And priority three, believe it or not, brings accuracy in last. It\u2019s nice to be able to hit a marauding gnat at 300 yards, but in most cases if your home-defense rifle can hold inside 4 inches at 100 yards, it\u2019ll be good enough.\n\nAll of this leads up, as you\u2019ve noticed, to the humble lever-action rifle as a candidate for your home-defense arsenal.\n\nThere\u2019s nothing wrong with the idea of a lever action, however archaic you perceive it to be. The repeating lever action rifle in many calibers, several models and multiple configurations was one of the original home-defense tools for much of the Western half of the U.S. for well over half a century, where it was just as effective in that role as it was in the hands of generations of hunters who brought home food for the table using it.\n\n\"lever-action, One of the advantages of a lever action is that you can tell at a glance if it\u2019s cocked or not.[\/caption]\n\nThe design is simple to learn: Fill it up through the loading gate, work the lever to chamber a round, cock the hammer, pull the trigger to fire, repeat as necessary. No separate magazines to lose or have fail to seat completely, no complicated controls to remember, no scope to knock loose, fog, or blur out at inside-the-house distances, no dead batteries, and less chance of \u201cspray-and-pray\u201d shooting as opposed to the average semi-auto like an AK-47 or AR-15.\n\nMagazine capacity, of course, is much less, but six to 10 rounds in a lever gun should easily handle 95 percent of the home-defense scenarios most of us are likely to encounter.\n\nWhich one should you choose? Look in your gun safe. You may already have what you need, whether it\u2019s Grandpa\u2019s old hand-me-down Winchester<\/a> in .30-30, a modern Browning BLR<\/a> in .308 Winchester, or even your Cowboy Action Shooting competition Marlin<\/a> or Uberti<\/a>. If not, evaluate your layout and decide whether you want the additional power and range for both indoor and outdoor applications of a centerfire rifle cartridge like the .30-30 or .308, or if a handgun caliber that\u2019ll be softer on the eardrums indoors while still easily carrying 50 or 75 yards outdoors would be a better choice.\n\nFor some, the utility of stockpiling one load for rifle and handgun, like the .357 Mag or .45 Colt, is a further consideration. For others, the ability of family members to tolerate recoil is a factor, and while I do recommend something heavier, in such cases the rimfires in .22 LR, .22 Mag and the hotter .17 calibers may be a better choice with no disconcerting recoil or extreme muzzle blast. My wife has two much-beloved Marlin 1894s<\/a> in .32-20 from her cowboy competition days. She knows them intimately, she shoots them better than anything else in the vault, and in her case, she\u2019d be far better off with her Marlins than with any of my tricked-out AR-15s if it came to somebody kicking our front door in.\n\nClose Quarters<\/strong>\n\n\"lever-action, \u201cShorter barrels can shoot every bit as accurately as longer barrels, and they maneuver infinitely better through tight confines\u2026 \u201d[\/caption]\n\nIndoor practicality dictates a short barrel. Shorter barrels can shoot every bit as accurately as longer barrels, and they maneuver infinitely better through tight confines and angles if you have to. The general recommendation in case of loud noises in the middle of the night is to congregate with a phone in one defensible location in the home while waiting for the sirens, but sometimes you have to do what you have to do, and a short, light, handy lever-action carbine just navigates easier all the way round than a longer barrel does. I do own Grandpa\u2019s old Winchester Model 94<\/a> in .30-30, and its 20-inch barrel is the longest I\u2019d go on a home-defense carbine by choice. I also have a 24-inch Marlin 1894 in .45 Colt that I could tolerate reasonably well, if it was all I had. Keep in mind that octagonal barrels will be heavier than round, and the shorter you go the less magazine capacity. There\u2019s no absolute, so buy what works best for you, or use what you already have if money\u2019s tight.\n\nRELATED STORY: Uberti\u2019s Silverboy Lever-Action Rifle in .22 LR<\/a><\/strong>\n\nLever action sights may not be outstanding, but they are typically usable as they come. The standard blade front\/notch rear is perfectly adequate for most shooters with decent eyesight out to 75 yards and farther, if necessary. Most can be easily adjusted out to 100 yards and used without expensive aftermarket products. If you do want refinements, an aperture rear can help with distances and a white-outline front blade, or a gold bead, can help line things up in darker lighting. Various methods of mounting scopes exist, with Marlins and Brownings being the easiest as they come pre-drilled and tapped for an optic. Indoors, a scope works against you and outdoors it can work for you, but it tends to slow down target acquisition. A good set of iron sights can put you right on target, right now, and that\u2019s important in close-up encounters.\n\nMost classic lever guns use under-barrel tube magazines, from the traditional side-loading Winchester to the \u201crimfire style\u201d on many .22 lever actions and on the Henry<\/a> rimfires and centerfires, where rounds are loaded through a port in the forward section of the magazine tube itself. The Browning BLR uses a detachable box magazine. In the most common home-defense context, there\u2019s no real advantage to any of these types since you\u2019re not looking at speed reloads anyway.\n\nIn the heavier calibers, consider a good recoil pad, if the new carbine doesn\u2019t already have one. The .30-30 is a fairly mild round for a rifle, but its stock design can punch a shoulder smartly with a solid steel or composite buttplate. Same with the .44 Mag caliber. You\u2019ll get more cooperation in learning and practice from family members if you reduce the \u201couch\u201d factor going in.\n\nThreat Takedown<\/strong>\n\n\"lever-action-rifles-7\"\n\nLearn how to work your home with your new lever gun once you make your choice. Take corners wide, where possible. Don\u2019t walk into a room or round a blind corner barrel-first\u2014you don\u2019t know who might be there to grab it. Don\u2019t round a close corner muzzle-up, it\u2019s too easy for an intruder to deflect the barrel or disarm you entirely. Navigate tight corners and doorways muzzle-down, making the gun harder to grab or deflect, and you can simply drop to one knee while pivoting the barrel up and firing if it is grabbed. Remember, the carbine can also make a very effective impact weapon, but make absolutely sure anybody using it understands whatever safety mechanism it may have. Simple, fast, light, reliable and affordable, the lever action still has a place.\n\nRELATED STORY: 15 New Guns and Accessories in the \"Old West\"<\/a><\/strong>","post_title":"Lifesaving Lever-Action Rifles For Home Defense","post_excerpt":"These classic lever-action rifles deliver reliable home-defense firepower when it matters most!","post_status":"publish","comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","post_password":"","post_name":"lifesaving-lever-action-rifles-for-home-defense","to_ping":"","pinged":"\nhttps:\/\/gunsoftheoldwest.com\/2015\/04\/15-new-guns-and-accessories-in-the-old-west\/","post_modified":"2023-05-31 12:06:26","post_modified_gmt":"2023-05-31 12:06:26","post_content_filtered":"","post_parent":0,"guid":"https:\/\/www.dev.athlonoutdoors.com\/2015\/05\/28\/lifesaving-lever-action-rifles-for-home-defense\/","menu_order":0,"post_type":"post","post_mime_type":"","comment_count":"0","filter":"raw"},{"ID":109242,"post_author":"303","post_date":"2015-05-25 09:00:37","post_date_gmt":"2015-05-25 13:00:37","post_content":"\n\nThe lever-action rifle is alive and doing quite well among both domestic and foreign makers, and there\u2019s a wide field to choose from in selecting one for home-defense use. Imagine what you want it to do before you go shopping around. The centerfire models will have a fair amount of crossover in serving both the home front and the hunting camp, if that\u2019s important to you, and you can obviously stretch your money farther by extending the dual utility of a true rifle caliber. The so-called pistol-caliber lever guns have the advantage of less recoil and ammunition commonality with handguns that might be in the house, and in any of the magnum calibers they\u2019re still no slouch. With practical ranges out to 150 yards and more in the hands of a good shooter, they can also easily handle both defense and hunting chores within their practical limitations. See the gallery above to learn about six manufacturers selling lever-action rifles.\n\n \n\nFor More Information<\/strong>\n\nWinchester\nhttp:\/\/www.winchesterguns.com<\/a>\n\nMarlin Firearms\nhttp:\/\/www.marlinfirearms.com<\/a>\n\nBrowning\nhttp:\/\/www.browning.com<\/a>\n\nHenry Repeating Arms\nhttp:\/\/www.henryrifles.com<\/a>\n\nMossberg\nhttp:\/\/www.mossberg.com<\/a>\n\nRossi USA\nhttp:\/\/www.rossiusa.com<\/a>\n\n \n\nRelated Stories<\/strong>\n\n4 New Old West Guns For 2015<\/a>\n\nNew For 2015: Browning AB3 Hunter Rifle<\/a>\n\nNew For 2015: Winchester XPR Bolt-Action Rifle<\/a>\n\nNew Sporting Rifles for 2014 | Varmint, Hunting & Long-Range Roundup<\/a>\n\nGun Review: Mossberg\u2019s Duck Commanders<\/a>","post_title":"6 Manufacturers Selling Lever-Action Rifles For Home Defense Or Hunting","post_excerpt":"There's a wide field of both domestic and foreign manufacturers offering lever-action rifles for home defense and hunting.","post_status":"publish","comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","post_password":"","post_name":"6-manufacturers-selling-lever-action-rifles-for-home-defense-or-hunting","to_ping":"","pinged":"https:\/\/www.personaldefenseworld.com\/2015\/04\/4-new-old-west-guns-for-2015\/#4-new-old-west-guns-for-2015\nhttps:\/\/www.personaldefenseworld.com\/2015\/02\/new-2015-browning-ab3-hunter-rifle\/\nhttps:\/\/www.personaldefenseworld.com\/2015\/01\/new-2015-winchester-xpr-bolt-action-rifle\/\nhttps:\/\/www.tactical-life.com\/firearms\/new-sporting-rifles-for-2014\/","post_modified":"2023-05-31 12:06:54","post_modified_gmt":"2023-05-31 12:06:54","post_content_filtered":"","post_parent":0,"guid":"https:\/\/www.dev.athlonoutdoors.com\/2015\/05\/25\/6-manufacturers-selling-lever-action-rifles-for-home-defense-or-hunting\/","menu_order":0,"post_type":"post","post_mime_type":"","comment_count":"0","filter":"raw"}],"next":false,"prev":true,"total_page":12},"paged":1,"column_class":"jeg_col_2o3","class":"jnews_block_23"};

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H-S Precision VTD Pro-Series 2000<\/h4>\n\n\n\n
\"H-S
H-S Precision is bringing the art of the takedown rifle into the\nmodern era. The Pro-Series 2000 is a stainless steel, bolt-action takedown\nrifle with a 22- to 26-inch match-grade barrel that can be chambered in anything from .204 Ruger to .458 Lott. MSRP $5,495. <\/figcaption><\/figure>\n\n\n\n

H-S Precision is bringing the art of the takedown rifle into the modern era. The Pro-Series 2000 is a stainless steel, bolt-action takedown rifle with a 22- to 26-inch match-grade barrel that can be chambered in anything from .204 Ruger to .458 Lott. MSRP is a cool $5,495. For even more info, please visit hsprecision.com<\/a>.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

Dakota Arms Model 76 Traveler<\/h4>\n\n\n\n
\"Dakota<\/figure>\n\n\n\n

This is the Cadillac of takedown rifles. The Traveler is available in three grades\u2014 Classic, Safari and African\u2014and you can choose from a limitless array of upgrades. This rifle has a unique takedown system that offers threadless assembly and disassembly. It\u2019s available in calibers from .22-250 to .450 Dakota. Lastly is MSRP, which comes in at $8,890. For even more info, please visit dakotaarms.com<\/a>.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

Sauer 202 Take Down<\/h4>\n\n\n\n
\"Sauer
This rifle raises the bar on standard takedown rifles. It has a solid action with a receiver that can accommodate all calibers from 6.5x55mm up to the massive .458 Lott. Numerous options and calibers are available, including beautifully figured stocks of grade 4 Turkish walnut. MSRP: 6,333 to $10,607. <\/figcaption><\/figure>\n\n\n\n

This rifle raises the bar on standard takedown rifles. It has a solid action with a receiver that can accommodate all calibers from 6.5x55mm up to the massive .458 Lott. Numerous options and calibers are available, including beautifully figured stocks of grade 4 Turkish walnut. MSRP can get up there, ranging from $6,333 to $10,607. For even more info, please visit sauer.de\/en<\/a>.<\/p>\n","post_title":"6 High-Quality Takedown Rifles for Easy Transport","post_excerpt":"","post_status":"publish","comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","post_password":"","post_name":"best-takedown-rifles","to_ping":"","pinged":"","post_modified":"2023-10-31 22:40:55","post_modified_gmt":"2023-11-01 02:40:55","post_content_filtered":"","post_parent":0,"guid":"https:\/\/www.dev.athlonoutdoors.com\/2015\/08\/26\/best-takedown-rifles\/","menu_order":0,"post_type":"post","post_mime_type":"","comment_count":"0","filter":"raw"},{"ID":109186,"post_author":"303","post_date":"2015-05-28 09:45:25","post_date_gmt":"2015-05-28 13:45:25","post_content":"\n\nOne of the greatest fallacies for those looking to upgrade or augment their home defense arsenal with a new long gun is the idea that you can\u2019t possibly defend your hearth and homestead without military-grade hardware, sophisticated optics and a 200-round drum magazine. Statistics, and reality, argue against that concept in terms of absolute requirements for repelling borders and defending castle walls. Do you typically need to blow off 200 rounds in a single in-home encounter or shoot the wings off a gnat at 300 yards? Nope. Do you really need to be lugging a 12-pound defensive package around the house? No again. So, what do you need?\n\nFirst off, as with any tool, look at the job the tool needs to do. Forget hordes of angry villagers with torches at the gates, or even herds of innocent zombies just out for a midnight snack. The statistical norm for a home \u201cattack\u201d is one or two people attempting to break in for one of three reasons: intoxication, anger or theft. These run anywhere from the drunk mistaking your home for somebody else\u2019s, the ex-boyfriend out for revenge, the classic (and random) middle-of-the-night burglar and the organized home invasion. With the exception of the more \u201ctargeted\u201d home invasion, most threats to the occupants are not particularly well thought out, not highly organized and not normally carried out by more than one or two hostiles. Most are close up, do not involve either extended timeframes or extended distances and do not burn up truckloads of ammunition.\n\nAn apartment dweller would rarely be shooting 300 yards in defense of wife and child, and the family living in a quiet suburban cul-de-sac is unlikely to need to shoot beyond the boundaries of either front yard or back fence. Obviously, the remote ranch house an hour from the nearest 911 response is a different matter, but for the majority of us, the home-defense rifle simply doesn\u2019t have to be a heavy, high-capacity, credit-card buster.\n\n\"lever-action, A tall gold bead like this Marbles Carbine Blade comes standard on some lever guns and can be ordered from Brownells.[\/caption]\n\nGiven all that, why do we even want a rifle in the first place? There are several reasons\u2014a rifle tends to be more powerful than a handgun (even when firing handgun ammunition because of velocity gains through longer barrels), it\u2019s frequently easier for many to shoot well at varying distances than a handgun, it extends the practical range over a handgun, it can be more intimidating to an intruder than the average handgun, and the right rifle can be relatively quick for even a non-gunnie to learn and operate effectively.\n\nRELATED STORY: 6 Manufacturers Selling Lever-Action Rifles For Home Defense Or Hunting<\/a><\/strong>\n\nIn choosing your rifle priority one is reliability. It has to function, should be simple to operate and should not be subject to ammo sensitivity against a wide range of brands and bullet types. Priority two is power, which should be in a \u201cserious\u201d caliber, such as .38 Special on up. And priority three, believe it or not, brings accuracy in last. It\u2019s nice to be able to hit a marauding gnat at 300 yards, but in most cases if your home-defense rifle can hold inside 4 inches at 100 yards, it\u2019ll be good enough.\n\nAll of this leads up, as you\u2019ve noticed, to the humble lever-action rifle as a candidate for your home-defense arsenal.\n\nThere\u2019s nothing wrong with the idea of a lever action, however archaic you perceive it to be. The repeating lever action rifle in many calibers, several models and multiple configurations was one of the original home-defense tools for much of the Western half of the U.S. for well over half a century, where it was just as effective in that role as it was in the hands of generations of hunters who brought home food for the table using it.\n\n\"lever-action, One of the advantages of a lever action is that you can tell at a glance if it\u2019s cocked or not.[\/caption]\n\nThe design is simple to learn: Fill it up through the loading gate, work the lever to chamber a round, cock the hammer, pull the trigger to fire, repeat as necessary. No separate magazines to lose or have fail to seat completely, no complicated controls to remember, no scope to knock loose, fog, or blur out at inside-the-house distances, no dead batteries, and less chance of \u201cspray-and-pray\u201d shooting as opposed to the average semi-auto like an AK-47 or AR-15.\n\nMagazine capacity, of course, is much less, but six to 10 rounds in a lever gun should easily handle 95 percent of the home-defense scenarios most of us are likely to encounter.\n\nWhich one should you choose? Look in your gun safe. You may already have what you need, whether it\u2019s Grandpa\u2019s old hand-me-down Winchester<\/a> in .30-30, a modern Browning BLR<\/a> in .308 Winchester, or even your Cowboy Action Shooting competition Marlin<\/a> or Uberti<\/a>. If not, evaluate your layout and decide whether you want the additional power and range for both indoor and outdoor applications of a centerfire rifle cartridge like the .30-30 or .308, or if a handgun caliber that\u2019ll be softer on the eardrums indoors while still easily carrying 50 or 75 yards outdoors would be a better choice.\n\nFor some, the utility of stockpiling one load for rifle and handgun, like the .357 Mag or .45 Colt, is a further consideration. For others, the ability of family members to tolerate recoil is a factor, and while I do recommend something heavier, in such cases the rimfires in .22 LR, .22 Mag and the hotter .17 calibers may be a better choice with no disconcerting recoil or extreme muzzle blast. My wife has two much-beloved Marlin 1894s<\/a> in .32-20 from her cowboy competition days. She knows them intimately, she shoots them better than anything else in the vault, and in her case, she\u2019d be far better off with her Marlins than with any of my tricked-out AR-15s if it came to somebody kicking our front door in.\n\nClose Quarters<\/strong>\n\n\"lever-action, \u201cShorter barrels can shoot every bit as accurately as longer barrels, and they maneuver infinitely better through tight confines\u2026 \u201d[\/caption]\n\nIndoor practicality dictates a short barrel. Shorter barrels can shoot every bit as accurately as longer barrels, and they maneuver infinitely better through tight confines and angles if you have to. The general recommendation in case of loud noises in the middle of the night is to congregate with a phone in one defensible location in the home while waiting for the sirens, but sometimes you have to do what you have to do, and a short, light, handy lever-action carbine just navigates easier all the way round than a longer barrel does. I do own Grandpa\u2019s old Winchester Model 94<\/a> in .30-30, and its 20-inch barrel is the longest I\u2019d go on a home-defense carbine by choice. I also have a 24-inch Marlin 1894 in .45 Colt that I could tolerate reasonably well, if it was all I had. Keep in mind that octagonal barrels will be heavier than round, and the shorter you go the less magazine capacity. There\u2019s no absolute, so buy what works best for you, or use what you already have if money\u2019s tight.\n\nRELATED STORY: Uberti\u2019s Silverboy Lever-Action Rifle in .22 LR<\/a><\/strong>\n\nLever action sights may not be outstanding, but they are typically usable as they come. The standard blade front\/notch rear is perfectly adequate for most shooters with decent eyesight out to 75 yards and farther, if necessary. Most can be easily adjusted out to 100 yards and used without expensive aftermarket products. If you do want refinements, an aperture rear can help with distances and a white-outline front blade, or a gold bead, can help line things up in darker lighting. Various methods of mounting scopes exist, with Marlins and Brownings being the easiest as they come pre-drilled and tapped for an optic. Indoors, a scope works against you and outdoors it can work for you, but it tends to slow down target acquisition. A good set of iron sights can put you right on target, right now, and that\u2019s important in close-up encounters.\n\nMost classic lever guns use under-barrel tube magazines, from the traditional side-loading Winchester to the \u201crimfire style\u201d on many .22 lever actions and on the Henry<\/a> rimfires and centerfires, where rounds are loaded through a port in the forward section of the magazine tube itself. The Browning BLR uses a detachable box magazine. In the most common home-defense context, there\u2019s no real advantage to any of these types since you\u2019re not looking at speed reloads anyway.\n\nIn the heavier calibers, consider a good recoil pad, if the new carbine doesn\u2019t already have one. The .30-30 is a fairly mild round for a rifle, but its stock design can punch a shoulder smartly with a solid steel or composite buttplate. Same with the .44 Mag caliber. You\u2019ll get more cooperation in learning and practice from family members if you reduce the \u201couch\u201d factor going in.\n\nThreat Takedown<\/strong>\n\n\"lever-action-rifles-7\"\n\nLearn how to work your home with your new lever gun once you make your choice. Take corners wide, where possible. Don\u2019t walk into a room or round a blind corner barrel-first\u2014you don\u2019t know who might be there to grab it. Don\u2019t round a close corner muzzle-up, it\u2019s too easy for an intruder to deflect the barrel or disarm you entirely. Navigate tight corners and doorways muzzle-down, making the gun harder to grab or deflect, and you can simply drop to one knee while pivoting the barrel up and firing if it is grabbed. Remember, the carbine can also make a very effective impact weapon, but make absolutely sure anybody using it understands whatever safety mechanism it may have. Simple, fast, light, reliable and affordable, the lever action still has a place.\n\nRELATED STORY: 15 New Guns and Accessories in the \"Old West\"<\/a><\/strong>","post_title":"Lifesaving Lever-Action Rifles For Home Defense","post_excerpt":"These classic lever-action rifles deliver reliable home-defense firepower when it matters most!","post_status":"publish","comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","post_password":"","post_name":"lifesaving-lever-action-rifles-for-home-defense","to_ping":"","pinged":"\nhttps:\/\/gunsoftheoldwest.com\/2015\/04\/15-new-guns-and-accessories-in-the-old-west\/","post_modified":"2023-05-31 12:06:26","post_modified_gmt":"2023-05-31 12:06:26","post_content_filtered":"","post_parent":0,"guid":"https:\/\/www.dev.athlonoutdoors.com\/2015\/05\/28\/lifesaving-lever-action-rifles-for-home-defense\/","menu_order":0,"post_type":"post","post_mime_type":"","comment_count":"0","filter":"raw"},{"ID":109242,"post_author":"303","post_date":"2015-05-25 09:00:37","post_date_gmt":"2015-05-25 13:00:37","post_content":"\n\nThe lever-action rifle is alive and doing quite well among both domestic and foreign makers, and there\u2019s a wide field to choose from in selecting one for home-defense use. Imagine what you want it to do before you go shopping around. The centerfire models will have a fair amount of crossover in serving both the home front and the hunting camp, if that\u2019s important to you, and you can obviously stretch your money farther by extending the dual utility of a true rifle caliber. The so-called pistol-caliber lever guns have the advantage of less recoil and ammunition commonality with handguns that might be in the house, and in any of the magnum calibers they\u2019re still no slouch. With practical ranges out to 150 yards and more in the hands of a good shooter, they can also easily handle both defense and hunting chores within their practical limitations. See the gallery above to learn about six manufacturers selling lever-action rifles.\n\n \n\nFor More Information<\/strong>\n\nWinchester\nhttp:\/\/www.winchesterguns.com<\/a>\n\nMarlin Firearms\nhttp:\/\/www.marlinfirearms.com<\/a>\n\nBrowning\nhttp:\/\/www.browning.com<\/a>\n\nHenry Repeating Arms\nhttp:\/\/www.henryrifles.com<\/a>\n\nMossberg\nhttp:\/\/www.mossberg.com<\/a>\n\nRossi USA\nhttp:\/\/www.rossiusa.com<\/a>\n\n \n\nRelated Stories<\/strong>\n\n4 New Old West Guns For 2015<\/a>\n\nNew For 2015: Browning AB3 Hunter Rifle<\/a>\n\nNew For 2015: Winchester XPR Bolt-Action Rifle<\/a>\n\nNew Sporting Rifles for 2014 | Varmint, Hunting & Long-Range Roundup<\/a>\n\nGun Review: Mossberg\u2019s Duck Commanders<\/a>","post_title":"6 Manufacturers Selling Lever-Action Rifles For Home Defense Or Hunting","post_excerpt":"There's a wide field of both domestic and foreign manufacturers offering lever-action rifles for home defense and hunting.","post_status":"publish","comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","post_password":"","post_name":"6-manufacturers-selling-lever-action-rifles-for-home-defense-or-hunting","to_ping":"","pinged":"https:\/\/www.personaldefenseworld.com\/2015\/04\/4-new-old-west-guns-for-2015\/#4-new-old-west-guns-for-2015\nhttps:\/\/www.personaldefenseworld.com\/2015\/02\/new-2015-browning-ab3-hunter-rifle\/\nhttps:\/\/www.personaldefenseworld.com\/2015\/01\/new-2015-winchester-xpr-bolt-action-rifle\/\nhttps:\/\/www.tactical-life.com\/firearms\/new-sporting-rifles-for-2014\/","post_modified":"2023-05-31 12:06:54","post_modified_gmt":"2023-05-31 12:06:54","post_content_filtered":"","post_parent":0,"guid":"https:\/\/www.dev.athlonoutdoors.com\/2015\/05\/25\/6-manufacturers-selling-lever-action-rifles-for-home-defense-or-hunting\/","menu_order":0,"post_type":"post","post_mime_type":"","comment_count":"0","filter":"raw"}],"next":false,"prev":true,"total_page":12},"paged":1,"column_class":"jeg_col_2o3","class":"jnews_block_23"};

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\n

Another rifle we've covered at length before<\/a>. Lever-action rifles are the classic takedown rifle design. Taylor\u2019s Alaskan in .44 Magnum is a modified 1892 Winchester design that is very popular with Alaskan bush pilots for backwoods shooting. Lastly, MSRP comes in at $1,366. For even more info, please visit taylorsfirearms.com<\/a>.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

H-S Precision VTD Pro-Series 2000<\/h4>\n\n\n\n
\"H-S
H-S Precision is bringing the art of the takedown rifle into the\nmodern era. The Pro-Series 2000 is a stainless steel, bolt-action takedown\nrifle with a 22- to 26-inch match-grade barrel that can be chambered in anything from .204 Ruger to .458 Lott. MSRP $5,495. <\/figcaption><\/figure>\n\n\n\n

H-S Precision is bringing the art of the takedown rifle into the modern era. The Pro-Series 2000 is a stainless steel, bolt-action takedown rifle with a 22- to 26-inch match-grade barrel that can be chambered in anything from .204 Ruger to .458 Lott. MSRP is a cool $5,495. For even more info, please visit hsprecision.com<\/a>.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

Dakota Arms Model 76 Traveler<\/h4>\n\n\n\n
\"Dakota<\/figure>\n\n\n\n

This is the Cadillac of takedown rifles. The Traveler is available in three grades\u2014 Classic, Safari and African\u2014and you can choose from a limitless array of upgrades. This rifle has a unique takedown system that offers threadless assembly and disassembly. It\u2019s available in calibers from .22-250 to .450 Dakota. Lastly is MSRP, which comes in at $8,890. For even more info, please visit dakotaarms.com<\/a>.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

Sauer 202 Take Down<\/h4>\n\n\n\n
\"Sauer
This rifle raises the bar on standard takedown rifles. It has a solid action with a receiver that can accommodate all calibers from 6.5x55mm up to the massive .458 Lott. Numerous options and calibers are available, including beautifully figured stocks of grade 4 Turkish walnut. MSRP: 6,333 to $10,607. <\/figcaption><\/figure>\n\n\n\n

This rifle raises the bar on standard takedown rifles. It has a solid action with a receiver that can accommodate all calibers from 6.5x55mm up to the massive .458 Lott. Numerous options and calibers are available, including beautifully figured stocks of grade 4 Turkish walnut. MSRP can get up there, ranging from $6,333 to $10,607. For even more info, please visit sauer.de\/en<\/a>.<\/p>\n","post_title":"6 High-Quality Takedown Rifles for Easy Transport","post_excerpt":"","post_status":"publish","comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","post_password":"","post_name":"best-takedown-rifles","to_ping":"","pinged":"","post_modified":"2023-10-31 22:40:55","post_modified_gmt":"2023-11-01 02:40:55","post_content_filtered":"","post_parent":0,"guid":"https:\/\/www.dev.athlonoutdoors.com\/2015\/08\/26\/best-takedown-rifles\/","menu_order":0,"post_type":"post","post_mime_type":"","comment_count":"0","filter":"raw"},{"ID":109186,"post_author":"303","post_date":"2015-05-28 09:45:25","post_date_gmt":"2015-05-28 13:45:25","post_content":"\n\nOne of the greatest fallacies for those looking to upgrade or augment their home defense arsenal with a new long gun is the idea that you can\u2019t possibly defend your hearth and homestead without military-grade hardware, sophisticated optics and a 200-round drum magazine. Statistics, and reality, argue against that concept in terms of absolute requirements for repelling borders and defending castle walls. Do you typically need to blow off 200 rounds in a single in-home encounter or shoot the wings off a gnat at 300 yards? Nope. Do you really need to be lugging a 12-pound defensive package around the house? No again. So, what do you need?\n\nFirst off, as with any tool, look at the job the tool needs to do. Forget hordes of angry villagers with torches at the gates, or even herds of innocent zombies just out for a midnight snack. The statistical norm for a home \u201cattack\u201d is one or two people attempting to break in for one of three reasons: intoxication, anger or theft. These run anywhere from the drunk mistaking your home for somebody else\u2019s, the ex-boyfriend out for revenge, the classic (and random) middle-of-the-night burglar and the organized home invasion. With the exception of the more \u201ctargeted\u201d home invasion, most threats to the occupants are not particularly well thought out, not highly organized and not normally carried out by more than one or two hostiles. Most are close up, do not involve either extended timeframes or extended distances and do not burn up truckloads of ammunition.\n\nAn apartment dweller would rarely be shooting 300 yards in defense of wife and child, and the family living in a quiet suburban cul-de-sac is unlikely to need to shoot beyond the boundaries of either front yard or back fence. Obviously, the remote ranch house an hour from the nearest 911 response is a different matter, but for the majority of us, the home-defense rifle simply doesn\u2019t have to be a heavy, high-capacity, credit-card buster.\n\n\"lever-action, A tall gold bead like this Marbles Carbine Blade comes standard on some lever guns and can be ordered from Brownells.[\/caption]\n\nGiven all that, why do we even want a rifle in the first place? There are several reasons\u2014a rifle tends to be more powerful than a handgun (even when firing handgun ammunition because of velocity gains through longer barrels), it\u2019s frequently easier for many to shoot well at varying distances than a handgun, it extends the practical range over a handgun, it can be more intimidating to an intruder than the average handgun, and the right rifle can be relatively quick for even a non-gunnie to learn and operate effectively.\n\nRELATED STORY: 6 Manufacturers Selling Lever-Action Rifles For Home Defense Or Hunting<\/a><\/strong>\n\nIn choosing your rifle priority one is reliability. It has to function, should be simple to operate and should not be subject to ammo sensitivity against a wide range of brands and bullet types. Priority two is power, which should be in a \u201cserious\u201d caliber, such as .38 Special on up. And priority three, believe it or not, brings accuracy in last. It\u2019s nice to be able to hit a marauding gnat at 300 yards, but in most cases if your home-defense rifle can hold inside 4 inches at 100 yards, it\u2019ll be good enough.\n\nAll of this leads up, as you\u2019ve noticed, to the humble lever-action rifle as a candidate for your home-defense arsenal.\n\nThere\u2019s nothing wrong with the idea of a lever action, however archaic you perceive it to be. The repeating lever action rifle in many calibers, several models and multiple configurations was one of the original home-defense tools for much of the Western half of the U.S. for well over half a century, where it was just as effective in that role as it was in the hands of generations of hunters who brought home food for the table using it.\n\n\"lever-action, One of the advantages of a lever action is that you can tell at a glance if it\u2019s cocked or not.[\/caption]\n\nThe design is simple to learn: Fill it up through the loading gate, work the lever to chamber a round, cock the hammer, pull the trigger to fire, repeat as necessary. No separate magazines to lose or have fail to seat completely, no complicated controls to remember, no scope to knock loose, fog, or blur out at inside-the-house distances, no dead batteries, and less chance of \u201cspray-and-pray\u201d shooting as opposed to the average semi-auto like an AK-47 or AR-15.\n\nMagazine capacity, of course, is much less, but six to 10 rounds in a lever gun should easily handle 95 percent of the home-defense scenarios most of us are likely to encounter.\n\nWhich one should you choose? Look in your gun safe. You may already have what you need, whether it\u2019s Grandpa\u2019s old hand-me-down Winchester<\/a> in .30-30, a modern Browning BLR<\/a> in .308 Winchester, or even your Cowboy Action Shooting competition Marlin<\/a> or Uberti<\/a>. If not, evaluate your layout and decide whether you want the additional power and range for both indoor and outdoor applications of a centerfire rifle cartridge like the .30-30 or .308, or if a handgun caliber that\u2019ll be softer on the eardrums indoors while still easily carrying 50 or 75 yards outdoors would be a better choice.\n\nFor some, the utility of stockpiling one load for rifle and handgun, like the .357 Mag or .45 Colt, is a further consideration. For others, the ability of family members to tolerate recoil is a factor, and while I do recommend something heavier, in such cases the rimfires in .22 LR, .22 Mag and the hotter .17 calibers may be a better choice with no disconcerting recoil or extreme muzzle blast. My wife has two much-beloved Marlin 1894s<\/a> in .32-20 from her cowboy competition days. She knows them intimately, she shoots them better than anything else in the vault, and in her case, she\u2019d be far better off with her Marlins than with any of my tricked-out AR-15s if it came to somebody kicking our front door in.\n\nClose Quarters<\/strong>\n\n\"lever-action, \u201cShorter barrels can shoot every bit as accurately as longer barrels, and they maneuver infinitely better through tight confines\u2026 \u201d[\/caption]\n\nIndoor practicality dictates a short barrel. Shorter barrels can shoot every bit as accurately as longer barrels, and they maneuver infinitely better through tight confines and angles if you have to. The general recommendation in case of loud noises in the middle of the night is to congregate with a phone in one defensible location in the home while waiting for the sirens, but sometimes you have to do what you have to do, and a short, light, handy lever-action carbine just navigates easier all the way round than a longer barrel does. I do own Grandpa\u2019s old Winchester Model 94<\/a> in .30-30, and its 20-inch barrel is the longest I\u2019d go on a home-defense carbine by choice. I also have a 24-inch Marlin 1894 in .45 Colt that I could tolerate reasonably well, if it was all I had. Keep in mind that octagonal barrels will be heavier than round, and the shorter you go the less magazine capacity. There\u2019s no absolute, so buy what works best for you, or use what you already have if money\u2019s tight.\n\nRELATED STORY: Uberti\u2019s Silverboy Lever-Action Rifle in .22 LR<\/a><\/strong>\n\nLever action sights may not be outstanding, but they are typically usable as they come. The standard blade front\/notch rear is perfectly adequate for most shooters with decent eyesight out to 75 yards and farther, if necessary. Most can be easily adjusted out to 100 yards and used without expensive aftermarket products. If you do want refinements, an aperture rear can help with distances and a white-outline front blade, or a gold bead, can help line things up in darker lighting. Various methods of mounting scopes exist, with Marlins and Brownings being the easiest as they come pre-drilled and tapped for an optic. Indoors, a scope works against you and outdoors it can work for you, but it tends to slow down target acquisition. A good set of iron sights can put you right on target, right now, and that\u2019s important in close-up encounters.\n\nMost classic lever guns use under-barrel tube magazines, from the traditional side-loading Winchester to the \u201crimfire style\u201d on many .22 lever actions and on the Henry<\/a> rimfires and centerfires, where rounds are loaded through a port in the forward section of the magazine tube itself. The Browning BLR uses a detachable box magazine. In the most common home-defense context, there\u2019s no real advantage to any of these types since you\u2019re not looking at speed reloads anyway.\n\nIn the heavier calibers, consider a good recoil pad, if the new carbine doesn\u2019t already have one. The .30-30 is a fairly mild round for a rifle, but its stock design can punch a shoulder smartly with a solid steel or composite buttplate. Same with the .44 Mag caliber. You\u2019ll get more cooperation in learning and practice from family members if you reduce the \u201couch\u201d factor going in.\n\nThreat Takedown<\/strong>\n\n\"lever-action-rifles-7\"\n\nLearn how to work your home with your new lever gun once you make your choice. Take corners wide, where possible. Don\u2019t walk into a room or round a blind corner barrel-first\u2014you don\u2019t know who might be there to grab it. Don\u2019t round a close corner muzzle-up, it\u2019s too easy for an intruder to deflect the barrel or disarm you entirely. Navigate tight corners and doorways muzzle-down, making the gun harder to grab or deflect, and you can simply drop to one knee while pivoting the barrel up and firing if it is grabbed. Remember, the carbine can also make a very effective impact weapon, but make absolutely sure anybody using it understands whatever safety mechanism it may have. Simple, fast, light, reliable and affordable, the lever action still has a place.\n\nRELATED STORY: 15 New Guns and Accessories in the \"Old West\"<\/a><\/strong>","post_title":"Lifesaving Lever-Action Rifles For Home Defense","post_excerpt":"These classic lever-action rifles deliver reliable home-defense firepower when it matters most!","post_status":"publish","comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","post_password":"","post_name":"lifesaving-lever-action-rifles-for-home-defense","to_ping":"","pinged":"\nhttps:\/\/gunsoftheoldwest.com\/2015\/04\/15-new-guns-and-accessories-in-the-old-west\/","post_modified":"2023-05-31 12:06:26","post_modified_gmt":"2023-05-31 12:06:26","post_content_filtered":"","post_parent":0,"guid":"https:\/\/www.dev.athlonoutdoors.com\/2015\/05\/28\/lifesaving-lever-action-rifles-for-home-defense\/","menu_order":0,"post_type":"post","post_mime_type":"","comment_count":"0","filter":"raw"},{"ID":109242,"post_author":"303","post_date":"2015-05-25 09:00:37","post_date_gmt":"2015-05-25 13:00:37","post_content":"\n\nThe lever-action rifle is alive and doing quite well among both domestic and foreign makers, and there\u2019s a wide field to choose from in selecting one for home-defense use. Imagine what you want it to do before you go shopping around. The centerfire models will have a fair amount of crossover in serving both the home front and the hunting camp, if that\u2019s important to you, and you can obviously stretch your money farther by extending the dual utility of a true rifle caliber. The so-called pistol-caliber lever guns have the advantage of less recoil and ammunition commonality with handguns that might be in the house, and in any of the magnum calibers they\u2019re still no slouch. With practical ranges out to 150 yards and more in the hands of a good shooter, they can also easily handle both defense and hunting chores within their practical limitations. See the gallery above to learn about six manufacturers selling lever-action rifles.\n\n \n\nFor More Information<\/strong>\n\nWinchester\nhttp:\/\/www.winchesterguns.com<\/a>\n\nMarlin Firearms\nhttp:\/\/www.marlinfirearms.com<\/a>\n\nBrowning\nhttp:\/\/www.browning.com<\/a>\n\nHenry Repeating Arms\nhttp:\/\/www.henryrifles.com<\/a>\n\nMossberg\nhttp:\/\/www.mossberg.com<\/a>\n\nRossi USA\nhttp:\/\/www.rossiusa.com<\/a>\n\n \n\nRelated Stories<\/strong>\n\n4 New Old West Guns For 2015<\/a>\n\nNew For 2015: Browning AB3 Hunter Rifle<\/a>\n\nNew For 2015: Winchester XPR Bolt-Action Rifle<\/a>\n\nNew Sporting Rifles for 2014 | Varmint, Hunting & Long-Range Roundup<\/a>\n\nGun Review: Mossberg\u2019s Duck Commanders<\/a>","post_title":"6 Manufacturers Selling Lever-Action Rifles For Home Defense Or Hunting","post_excerpt":"There's a wide field of both domestic and foreign manufacturers offering lever-action rifles for home defense and hunting.","post_status":"publish","comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","post_password":"","post_name":"6-manufacturers-selling-lever-action-rifles-for-home-defense-or-hunting","to_ping":"","pinged":"https:\/\/www.personaldefenseworld.com\/2015\/04\/4-new-old-west-guns-for-2015\/#4-new-old-west-guns-for-2015\nhttps:\/\/www.personaldefenseworld.com\/2015\/02\/new-2015-browning-ab3-hunter-rifle\/\nhttps:\/\/www.personaldefenseworld.com\/2015\/01\/new-2015-winchester-xpr-bolt-action-rifle\/\nhttps:\/\/www.tactical-life.com\/firearms\/new-sporting-rifles-for-2014\/","post_modified":"2023-05-31 12:06:54","post_modified_gmt":"2023-05-31 12:06:54","post_content_filtered":"","post_parent":0,"guid":"https:\/\/www.dev.athlonoutdoors.com\/2015\/05\/25\/6-manufacturers-selling-lever-action-rifles-for-home-defense-or-hunting\/","menu_order":0,"post_type":"post","post_mime_type":"","comment_count":"0","filter":"raw"}],"next":false,"prev":true,"total_page":12},"paged":1,"column_class":"jeg_col_2o3","class":"jnews_block_23"};

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\n
\"Takedown<\/figure>\n\n\n\n

Another rifle we've covered at length before<\/a>. Lever-action rifles are the classic takedown rifle design. Taylor\u2019s Alaskan in .44 Magnum is a modified 1892 Winchester design that is very popular with Alaskan bush pilots for backwoods shooting. Lastly, MSRP comes in at $1,366. For even more info, please visit taylorsfirearms.com<\/a>.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

H-S Precision VTD Pro-Series 2000<\/h4>\n\n\n\n
\"H-S
H-S Precision is bringing the art of the takedown rifle into the\nmodern era. The Pro-Series 2000 is a stainless steel, bolt-action takedown\nrifle with a 22- to 26-inch match-grade barrel that can be chambered in anything from .204 Ruger to .458 Lott. MSRP $5,495. <\/figcaption><\/figure>\n\n\n\n

H-S Precision is bringing the art of the takedown rifle into the modern era. The Pro-Series 2000 is a stainless steel, bolt-action takedown rifle with a 22- to 26-inch match-grade barrel that can be chambered in anything from .204 Ruger to .458 Lott. MSRP is a cool $5,495. For even more info, please visit hsprecision.com<\/a>.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

Dakota Arms Model 76 Traveler<\/h4>\n\n\n\n
\"Dakota<\/figure>\n\n\n\n

This is the Cadillac of takedown rifles. The Traveler is available in three grades\u2014 Classic, Safari and African\u2014and you can choose from a limitless array of upgrades. This rifle has a unique takedown system that offers threadless assembly and disassembly. It\u2019s available in calibers from .22-250 to .450 Dakota. Lastly is MSRP, which comes in at $8,890. For even more info, please visit dakotaarms.com<\/a>.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

Sauer 202 Take Down<\/h4>\n\n\n\n
\"Sauer
This rifle raises the bar on standard takedown rifles. It has a solid action with a receiver that can accommodate all calibers from 6.5x55mm up to the massive .458 Lott. Numerous options and calibers are available, including beautifully figured stocks of grade 4 Turkish walnut. MSRP: 6,333 to $10,607. <\/figcaption><\/figure>\n\n\n\n

This rifle raises the bar on standard takedown rifles. It has a solid action with a receiver that can accommodate all calibers from 6.5x55mm up to the massive .458 Lott. Numerous options and calibers are available, including beautifully figured stocks of grade 4 Turkish walnut. MSRP can get up there, ranging from $6,333 to $10,607. For even more info, please visit sauer.de\/en<\/a>.<\/p>\n","post_title":"6 High-Quality Takedown Rifles for Easy Transport","post_excerpt":"","post_status":"publish","comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","post_password":"","post_name":"best-takedown-rifles","to_ping":"","pinged":"","post_modified":"2023-10-31 22:40:55","post_modified_gmt":"2023-11-01 02:40:55","post_content_filtered":"","post_parent":0,"guid":"https:\/\/www.dev.athlonoutdoors.com\/2015\/08\/26\/best-takedown-rifles\/","menu_order":0,"post_type":"post","post_mime_type":"","comment_count":"0","filter":"raw"},{"ID":109186,"post_author":"303","post_date":"2015-05-28 09:45:25","post_date_gmt":"2015-05-28 13:45:25","post_content":"\n\nOne of the greatest fallacies for those looking to upgrade or augment their home defense arsenal with a new long gun is the idea that you can\u2019t possibly defend your hearth and homestead without military-grade hardware, sophisticated optics and a 200-round drum magazine. Statistics, and reality, argue against that concept in terms of absolute requirements for repelling borders and defending castle walls. Do you typically need to blow off 200 rounds in a single in-home encounter or shoot the wings off a gnat at 300 yards? Nope. Do you really need to be lugging a 12-pound defensive package around the house? No again. So, what do you need?\n\nFirst off, as with any tool, look at the job the tool needs to do. Forget hordes of angry villagers with torches at the gates, or even herds of innocent zombies just out for a midnight snack. The statistical norm for a home \u201cattack\u201d is one or two people attempting to break in for one of three reasons: intoxication, anger or theft. These run anywhere from the drunk mistaking your home for somebody else\u2019s, the ex-boyfriend out for revenge, the classic (and random) middle-of-the-night burglar and the organized home invasion. With the exception of the more \u201ctargeted\u201d home invasion, most threats to the occupants are not particularly well thought out, not highly organized and not normally carried out by more than one or two hostiles. Most are close up, do not involve either extended timeframes or extended distances and do not burn up truckloads of ammunition.\n\nAn apartment dweller would rarely be shooting 300 yards in defense of wife and child, and the family living in a quiet suburban cul-de-sac is unlikely to need to shoot beyond the boundaries of either front yard or back fence. Obviously, the remote ranch house an hour from the nearest 911 response is a different matter, but for the majority of us, the home-defense rifle simply doesn\u2019t have to be a heavy, high-capacity, credit-card buster.\n\n\"lever-action, A tall gold bead like this Marbles Carbine Blade comes standard on some lever guns and can be ordered from Brownells.[\/caption]\n\nGiven all that, why do we even want a rifle in the first place? There are several reasons\u2014a rifle tends to be more powerful than a handgun (even when firing handgun ammunition because of velocity gains through longer barrels), it\u2019s frequently easier for many to shoot well at varying distances than a handgun, it extends the practical range over a handgun, it can be more intimidating to an intruder than the average handgun, and the right rifle can be relatively quick for even a non-gunnie to learn and operate effectively.\n\nRELATED STORY: 6 Manufacturers Selling Lever-Action Rifles For Home Defense Or Hunting<\/a><\/strong>\n\nIn choosing your rifle priority one is reliability. It has to function, should be simple to operate and should not be subject to ammo sensitivity against a wide range of brands and bullet types. Priority two is power, which should be in a \u201cserious\u201d caliber, such as .38 Special on up. And priority three, believe it or not, brings accuracy in last. It\u2019s nice to be able to hit a marauding gnat at 300 yards, but in most cases if your home-defense rifle can hold inside 4 inches at 100 yards, it\u2019ll be good enough.\n\nAll of this leads up, as you\u2019ve noticed, to the humble lever-action rifle as a candidate for your home-defense arsenal.\n\nThere\u2019s nothing wrong with the idea of a lever action, however archaic you perceive it to be. The repeating lever action rifle in many calibers, several models and multiple configurations was one of the original home-defense tools for much of the Western half of the U.S. for well over half a century, where it was just as effective in that role as it was in the hands of generations of hunters who brought home food for the table using it.\n\n\"lever-action, One of the advantages of a lever action is that you can tell at a glance if it\u2019s cocked or not.[\/caption]\n\nThe design is simple to learn: Fill it up through the loading gate, work the lever to chamber a round, cock the hammer, pull the trigger to fire, repeat as necessary. No separate magazines to lose or have fail to seat completely, no complicated controls to remember, no scope to knock loose, fog, or blur out at inside-the-house distances, no dead batteries, and less chance of \u201cspray-and-pray\u201d shooting as opposed to the average semi-auto like an AK-47 or AR-15.\n\nMagazine capacity, of course, is much less, but six to 10 rounds in a lever gun should easily handle 95 percent of the home-defense scenarios most of us are likely to encounter.\n\nWhich one should you choose? Look in your gun safe. You may already have what you need, whether it\u2019s Grandpa\u2019s old hand-me-down Winchester<\/a> in .30-30, a modern Browning BLR<\/a> in .308 Winchester, or even your Cowboy Action Shooting competition Marlin<\/a> or Uberti<\/a>. If not, evaluate your layout and decide whether you want the additional power and range for both indoor and outdoor applications of a centerfire rifle cartridge like the .30-30 or .308, or if a handgun caliber that\u2019ll be softer on the eardrums indoors while still easily carrying 50 or 75 yards outdoors would be a better choice.\n\nFor some, the utility of stockpiling one load for rifle and handgun, like the .357 Mag or .45 Colt, is a further consideration. For others, the ability of family members to tolerate recoil is a factor, and while I do recommend something heavier, in such cases the rimfires in .22 LR, .22 Mag and the hotter .17 calibers may be a better choice with no disconcerting recoil or extreme muzzle blast. My wife has two much-beloved Marlin 1894s<\/a> in .32-20 from her cowboy competition days. She knows them intimately, she shoots them better than anything else in the vault, and in her case, she\u2019d be far better off with her Marlins than with any of my tricked-out AR-15s if it came to somebody kicking our front door in.\n\nClose Quarters<\/strong>\n\n\"lever-action, \u201cShorter barrels can shoot every bit as accurately as longer barrels, and they maneuver infinitely better through tight confines\u2026 \u201d[\/caption]\n\nIndoor practicality dictates a short barrel. Shorter barrels can shoot every bit as accurately as longer barrels, and they maneuver infinitely better through tight confines and angles if you have to. The general recommendation in case of loud noises in the middle of the night is to congregate with a phone in one defensible location in the home while waiting for the sirens, but sometimes you have to do what you have to do, and a short, light, handy lever-action carbine just navigates easier all the way round than a longer barrel does. I do own Grandpa\u2019s old Winchester Model 94<\/a> in .30-30, and its 20-inch barrel is the longest I\u2019d go on a home-defense carbine by choice. I also have a 24-inch Marlin 1894 in .45 Colt that I could tolerate reasonably well, if it was all I had. Keep in mind that octagonal barrels will be heavier than round, and the shorter you go the less magazine capacity. There\u2019s no absolute, so buy what works best for you, or use what you already have if money\u2019s tight.\n\nRELATED STORY: Uberti\u2019s Silverboy Lever-Action Rifle in .22 LR<\/a><\/strong>\n\nLever action sights may not be outstanding, but they are typically usable as they come. The standard blade front\/notch rear is perfectly adequate for most shooters with decent eyesight out to 75 yards and farther, if necessary. Most can be easily adjusted out to 100 yards and used without expensive aftermarket products. If you do want refinements, an aperture rear can help with distances and a white-outline front blade, or a gold bead, can help line things up in darker lighting. Various methods of mounting scopes exist, with Marlins and Brownings being the easiest as they come pre-drilled and tapped for an optic. Indoors, a scope works against you and outdoors it can work for you, but it tends to slow down target acquisition. A good set of iron sights can put you right on target, right now, and that\u2019s important in close-up encounters.\n\nMost classic lever guns use under-barrel tube magazines, from the traditional side-loading Winchester to the \u201crimfire style\u201d on many .22 lever actions and on the Henry<\/a> rimfires and centerfires, where rounds are loaded through a port in the forward section of the magazine tube itself. The Browning BLR uses a detachable box magazine. In the most common home-defense context, there\u2019s no real advantage to any of these types since you\u2019re not looking at speed reloads anyway.\n\nIn the heavier calibers, consider a good recoil pad, if the new carbine doesn\u2019t already have one. The .30-30 is a fairly mild round for a rifle, but its stock design can punch a shoulder smartly with a solid steel or composite buttplate. Same with the .44 Mag caliber. You\u2019ll get more cooperation in learning and practice from family members if you reduce the \u201couch\u201d factor going in.\n\nThreat Takedown<\/strong>\n\n\"lever-action-rifles-7\"\n\nLearn how to work your home with your new lever gun once you make your choice. Take corners wide, where possible. Don\u2019t walk into a room or round a blind corner barrel-first\u2014you don\u2019t know who might be there to grab it. Don\u2019t round a close corner muzzle-up, it\u2019s too easy for an intruder to deflect the barrel or disarm you entirely. Navigate tight corners and doorways muzzle-down, making the gun harder to grab or deflect, and you can simply drop to one knee while pivoting the barrel up and firing if it is grabbed. Remember, the carbine can also make a very effective impact weapon, but make absolutely sure anybody using it understands whatever safety mechanism it may have. Simple, fast, light, reliable and affordable, the lever action still has a place.\n\nRELATED STORY: 15 New Guns and Accessories in the \"Old West\"<\/a><\/strong>","post_title":"Lifesaving Lever-Action Rifles For Home Defense","post_excerpt":"These classic lever-action rifles deliver reliable home-defense firepower when it matters most!","post_status":"publish","comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","post_password":"","post_name":"lifesaving-lever-action-rifles-for-home-defense","to_ping":"","pinged":"\nhttps:\/\/gunsoftheoldwest.com\/2015\/04\/15-new-guns-and-accessories-in-the-old-west\/","post_modified":"2023-05-31 12:06:26","post_modified_gmt":"2023-05-31 12:06:26","post_content_filtered":"","post_parent":0,"guid":"https:\/\/www.dev.athlonoutdoors.com\/2015\/05\/28\/lifesaving-lever-action-rifles-for-home-defense\/","menu_order":0,"post_type":"post","post_mime_type":"","comment_count":"0","filter":"raw"},{"ID":109242,"post_author":"303","post_date":"2015-05-25 09:00:37","post_date_gmt":"2015-05-25 13:00:37","post_content":"\n\nThe lever-action rifle is alive and doing quite well among both domestic and foreign makers, and there\u2019s a wide field to choose from in selecting one for home-defense use. Imagine what you want it to do before you go shopping around. The centerfire models will have a fair amount of crossover in serving both the home front and the hunting camp, if that\u2019s important to you, and you can obviously stretch your money farther by extending the dual utility of a true rifle caliber. The so-called pistol-caliber lever guns have the advantage of less recoil and ammunition commonality with handguns that might be in the house, and in any of the magnum calibers they\u2019re still no slouch. With practical ranges out to 150 yards and more in the hands of a good shooter, they can also easily handle both defense and hunting chores within their practical limitations. See the gallery above to learn about six manufacturers selling lever-action rifles.\n\n \n\nFor More Information<\/strong>\n\nWinchester\nhttp:\/\/www.winchesterguns.com<\/a>\n\nMarlin Firearms\nhttp:\/\/www.marlinfirearms.com<\/a>\n\nBrowning\nhttp:\/\/www.browning.com<\/a>\n\nHenry Repeating Arms\nhttp:\/\/www.henryrifles.com<\/a>\n\nMossberg\nhttp:\/\/www.mossberg.com<\/a>\n\nRossi USA\nhttp:\/\/www.rossiusa.com<\/a>\n\n \n\nRelated Stories<\/strong>\n\n4 New Old West Guns For 2015<\/a>\n\nNew For 2015: Browning AB3 Hunter Rifle<\/a>\n\nNew For 2015: Winchester XPR Bolt-Action Rifle<\/a>\n\nNew Sporting Rifles for 2014 | Varmint, Hunting & Long-Range Roundup<\/a>\n\nGun Review: Mossberg\u2019s Duck Commanders<\/a>","post_title":"6 Manufacturers Selling Lever-Action Rifles For Home Defense Or Hunting","post_excerpt":"There's a wide field of both domestic and foreign manufacturers offering lever-action rifles for home defense and hunting.","post_status":"publish","comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","post_password":"","post_name":"6-manufacturers-selling-lever-action-rifles-for-home-defense-or-hunting","to_ping":"","pinged":"https:\/\/www.personaldefenseworld.com\/2015\/04\/4-new-old-west-guns-for-2015\/#4-new-old-west-guns-for-2015\nhttps:\/\/www.personaldefenseworld.com\/2015\/02\/new-2015-browning-ab3-hunter-rifle\/\nhttps:\/\/www.personaldefenseworld.com\/2015\/01\/new-2015-winchester-xpr-bolt-action-rifle\/\nhttps:\/\/www.tactical-life.com\/firearms\/new-sporting-rifles-for-2014\/","post_modified":"2023-05-31 12:06:54","post_modified_gmt":"2023-05-31 12:06:54","post_content_filtered":"","post_parent":0,"guid":"https:\/\/www.dev.athlonoutdoors.com\/2015\/05\/25\/6-manufacturers-selling-lever-action-rifles-for-home-defense-or-hunting\/","menu_order":0,"post_type":"post","post_mime_type":"","comment_count":"0","filter":"raw"}],"next":false,"prev":true,"total_page":12},"paged":1,"column_class":"jeg_col_2o3","class":"jnews_block_23"};

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\n

Taylor\u2019s 1892 Alaskan Takedown<\/h4>\n\n\n\n
\"Takedown<\/figure>\n\n\n\n

Another rifle we've covered at length before<\/a>. Lever-action rifles are the classic takedown rifle design. Taylor\u2019s Alaskan in .44 Magnum is a modified 1892 Winchester design that is very popular with Alaskan bush pilots for backwoods shooting. Lastly, MSRP comes in at $1,366. For even more info, please visit taylorsfirearms.com<\/a>.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

H-S Precision VTD Pro-Series 2000<\/h4>\n\n\n\n
\"H-S
H-S Precision is bringing the art of the takedown rifle into the\nmodern era. The Pro-Series 2000 is a stainless steel, bolt-action takedown\nrifle with a 22- to 26-inch match-grade barrel that can be chambered in anything from .204 Ruger to .458 Lott. MSRP $5,495. <\/figcaption><\/figure>\n\n\n\n

H-S Precision is bringing the art of the takedown rifle into the modern era. The Pro-Series 2000 is a stainless steel, bolt-action takedown rifle with a 22- to 26-inch match-grade barrel that can be chambered in anything from .204 Ruger to .458 Lott. MSRP is a cool $5,495. For even more info, please visit hsprecision.com<\/a>.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

Dakota Arms Model 76 Traveler<\/h4>\n\n\n\n
\"Dakota<\/figure>\n\n\n\n

This is the Cadillac of takedown rifles. The Traveler is available in three grades\u2014 Classic, Safari and African\u2014and you can choose from a limitless array of upgrades. This rifle has a unique takedown system that offers threadless assembly and disassembly. It\u2019s available in calibers from .22-250 to .450 Dakota. Lastly is MSRP, which comes in at $8,890. For even more info, please visit dakotaarms.com<\/a>.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

Sauer 202 Take Down<\/h4>\n\n\n\n
\"Sauer
This rifle raises the bar on standard takedown rifles. It has a solid action with a receiver that can accommodate all calibers from 6.5x55mm up to the massive .458 Lott. Numerous options and calibers are available, including beautifully figured stocks of grade 4 Turkish walnut. MSRP: 6,333 to $10,607. <\/figcaption><\/figure>\n\n\n\n

This rifle raises the bar on standard takedown rifles. It has a solid action with a receiver that can accommodate all calibers from 6.5x55mm up to the massive .458 Lott. Numerous options and calibers are available, including beautifully figured stocks of grade 4 Turkish walnut. MSRP can get up there, ranging from $6,333 to $10,607. For even more info, please visit sauer.de\/en<\/a>.<\/p>\n","post_title":"6 High-Quality Takedown Rifles for Easy Transport","post_excerpt":"","post_status":"publish","comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","post_password":"","post_name":"best-takedown-rifles","to_ping":"","pinged":"","post_modified":"2023-10-31 22:40:55","post_modified_gmt":"2023-11-01 02:40:55","post_content_filtered":"","post_parent":0,"guid":"https:\/\/www.dev.athlonoutdoors.com\/2015\/08\/26\/best-takedown-rifles\/","menu_order":0,"post_type":"post","post_mime_type":"","comment_count":"0","filter":"raw"},{"ID":109186,"post_author":"303","post_date":"2015-05-28 09:45:25","post_date_gmt":"2015-05-28 13:45:25","post_content":"\n\nOne of the greatest fallacies for those looking to upgrade or augment their home defense arsenal with a new long gun is the idea that you can\u2019t possibly defend your hearth and homestead without military-grade hardware, sophisticated optics and a 200-round drum magazine. Statistics, and reality, argue against that concept in terms of absolute requirements for repelling borders and defending castle walls. Do you typically need to blow off 200 rounds in a single in-home encounter or shoot the wings off a gnat at 300 yards? Nope. Do you really need to be lugging a 12-pound defensive package around the house? No again. So, what do you need?\n\nFirst off, as with any tool, look at the job the tool needs to do. Forget hordes of angry villagers with torches at the gates, or even herds of innocent zombies just out for a midnight snack. The statistical norm for a home \u201cattack\u201d is one or two people attempting to break in for one of three reasons: intoxication, anger or theft. These run anywhere from the drunk mistaking your home for somebody else\u2019s, the ex-boyfriend out for revenge, the classic (and random) middle-of-the-night burglar and the organized home invasion. With the exception of the more \u201ctargeted\u201d home invasion, most threats to the occupants are not particularly well thought out, not highly organized and not normally carried out by more than one or two hostiles. Most are close up, do not involve either extended timeframes or extended distances and do not burn up truckloads of ammunition.\n\nAn apartment dweller would rarely be shooting 300 yards in defense of wife and child, and the family living in a quiet suburban cul-de-sac is unlikely to need to shoot beyond the boundaries of either front yard or back fence. Obviously, the remote ranch house an hour from the nearest 911 response is a different matter, but for the majority of us, the home-defense rifle simply doesn\u2019t have to be a heavy, high-capacity, credit-card buster.\n\n\"lever-action, A tall gold bead like this Marbles Carbine Blade comes standard on some lever guns and can be ordered from Brownells.[\/caption]\n\nGiven all that, why do we even want a rifle in the first place? There are several reasons\u2014a rifle tends to be more powerful than a handgun (even when firing handgun ammunition because of velocity gains through longer barrels), it\u2019s frequently easier for many to shoot well at varying distances than a handgun, it extends the practical range over a handgun, it can be more intimidating to an intruder than the average handgun, and the right rifle can be relatively quick for even a non-gunnie to learn and operate effectively.\n\nRELATED STORY: 6 Manufacturers Selling Lever-Action Rifles For Home Defense Or Hunting<\/a><\/strong>\n\nIn choosing your rifle priority one is reliability. It has to function, should be simple to operate and should not be subject to ammo sensitivity against a wide range of brands and bullet types. Priority two is power, which should be in a \u201cserious\u201d caliber, such as .38 Special on up. And priority three, believe it or not, brings accuracy in last. It\u2019s nice to be able to hit a marauding gnat at 300 yards, but in most cases if your home-defense rifle can hold inside 4 inches at 100 yards, it\u2019ll be good enough.\n\nAll of this leads up, as you\u2019ve noticed, to the humble lever-action rifle as a candidate for your home-defense arsenal.\n\nThere\u2019s nothing wrong with the idea of a lever action, however archaic you perceive it to be. The repeating lever action rifle in many calibers, several models and multiple configurations was one of the original home-defense tools for much of the Western half of the U.S. for well over half a century, where it was just as effective in that role as it was in the hands of generations of hunters who brought home food for the table using it.\n\n\"lever-action, One of the advantages of a lever action is that you can tell at a glance if it\u2019s cocked or not.[\/caption]\n\nThe design is simple to learn: Fill it up through the loading gate, work the lever to chamber a round, cock the hammer, pull the trigger to fire, repeat as necessary. No separate magazines to lose or have fail to seat completely, no complicated controls to remember, no scope to knock loose, fog, or blur out at inside-the-house distances, no dead batteries, and less chance of \u201cspray-and-pray\u201d shooting as opposed to the average semi-auto like an AK-47 or AR-15.\n\nMagazine capacity, of course, is much less, but six to 10 rounds in a lever gun should easily handle 95 percent of the home-defense scenarios most of us are likely to encounter.\n\nWhich one should you choose? Look in your gun safe. You may already have what you need, whether it\u2019s Grandpa\u2019s old hand-me-down Winchester<\/a> in .30-30, a modern Browning BLR<\/a> in .308 Winchester, or even your Cowboy Action Shooting competition Marlin<\/a> or Uberti<\/a>. If not, evaluate your layout and decide whether you want the additional power and range for both indoor and outdoor applications of a centerfire rifle cartridge like the .30-30 or .308, or if a handgun caliber that\u2019ll be softer on the eardrums indoors while still easily carrying 50 or 75 yards outdoors would be a better choice.\n\nFor some, the utility of stockpiling one load for rifle and handgun, like the .357 Mag or .45 Colt, is a further consideration. For others, the ability of family members to tolerate recoil is a factor, and while I do recommend something heavier, in such cases the rimfires in .22 LR, .22 Mag and the hotter .17 calibers may be a better choice with no disconcerting recoil or extreme muzzle blast. My wife has two much-beloved Marlin 1894s<\/a> in .32-20 from her cowboy competition days. She knows them intimately, she shoots them better than anything else in the vault, and in her case, she\u2019d be far better off with her Marlins than with any of my tricked-out AR-15s if it came to somebody kicking our front door in.\n\nClose Quarters<\/strong>\n\n\"lever-action, \u201cShorter barrels can shoot every bit as accurately as longer barrels, and they maneuver infinitely better through tight confines\u2026 \u201d[\/caption]\n\nIndoor practicality dictates a short barrel. Shorter barrels can shoot every bit as accurately as longer barrels, and they maneuver infinitely better through tight confines and angles if you have to. The general recommendation in case of loud noises in the middle of the night is to congregate with a phone in one defensible location in the home while waiting for the sirens, but sometimes you have to do what you have to do, and a short, light, handy lever-action carbine just navigates easier all the way round than a longer barrel does. I do own Grandpa\u2019s old Winchester Model 94<\/a> in .30-30, and its 20-inch barrel is the longest I\u2019d go on a home-defense carbine by choice. I also have a 24-inch Marlin 1894 in .45 Colt that I could tolerate reasonably well, if it was all I had. Keep in mind that octagonal barrels will be heavier than round, and the shorter you go the less magazine capacity. There\u2019s no absolute, so buy what works best for you, or use what you already have if money\u2019s tight.\n\nRELATED STORY: Uberti\u2019s Silverboy Lever-Action Rifle in .22 LR<\/a><\/strong>\n\nLever action sights may not be outstanding, but they are typically usable as they come. The standard blade front\/notch rear is perfectly adequate for most shooters with decent eyesight out to 75 yards and farther, if necessary. Most can be easily adjusted out to 100 yards and used without expensive aftermarket products. If you do want refinements, an aperture rear can help with distances and a white-outline front blade, or a gold bead, can help line things up in darker lighting. Various methods of mounting scopes exist, with Marlins and Brownings being the easiest as they come pre-drilled and tapped for an optic. Indoors, a scope works against you and outdoors it can work for you, but it tends to slow down target acquisition. A good set of iron sights can put you right on target, right now, and that\u2019s important in close-up encounters.\n\nMost classic lever guns use under-barrel tube magazines, from the traditional side-loading Winchester to the \u201crimfire style\u201d on many .22 lever actions and on the Henry<\/a> rimfires and centerfires, where rounds are loaded through a port in the forward section of the magazine tube itself. The Browning BLR uses a detachable box magazine. In the most common home-defense context, there\u2019s no real advantage to any of these types since you\u2019re not looking at speed reloads anyway.\n\nIn the heavier calibers, consider a good recoil pad, if the new carbine doesn\u2019t already have one. The .30-30 is a fairly mild round for a rifle, but its stock design can punch a shoulder smartly with a solid steel or composite buttplate. Same with the .44 Mag caliber. You\u2019ll get more cooperation in learning and practice from family members if you reduce the \u201couch\u201d factor going in.\n\nThreat Takedown<\/strong>\n\n\"lever-action-rifles-7\"\n\nLearn how to work your home with your new lever gun once you make your choice. Take corners wide, where possible. Don\u2019t walk into a room or round a blind corner barrel-first\u2014you don\u2019t know who might be there to grab it. Don\u2019t round a close corner muzzle-up, it\u2019s too easy for an intruder to deflect the barrel or disarm you entirely. Navigate tight corners and doorways muzzle-down, making the gun harder to grab or deflect, and you can simply drop to one knee while pivoting the barrel up and firing if it is grabbed. Remember, the carbine can also make a very effective impact weapon, but make absolutely sure anybody using it understands whatever safety mechanism it may have. Simple, fast, light, reliable and affordable, the lever action still has a place.\n\nRELATED STORY: 15 New Guns and Accessories in the \"Old West\"<\/a><\/strong>","post_title":"Lifesaving Lever-Action Rifles For Home Defense","post_excerpt":"These classic lever-action rifles deliver reliable home-defense firepower when it matters most!","post_status":"publish","comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","post_password":"","post_name":"lifesaving-lever-action-rifles-for-home-defense","to_ping":"","pinged":"\nhttps:\/\/gunsoftheoldwest.com\/2015\/04\/15-new-guns-and-accessories-in-the-old-west\/","post_modified":"2023-05-31 12:06:26","post_modified_gmt":"2023-05-31 12:06:26","post_content_filtered":"","post_parent":0,"guid":"https:\/\/www.dev.athlonoutdoors.com\/2015\/05\/28\/lifesaving-lever-action-rifles-for-home-defense\/","menu_order":0,"post_type":"post","post_mime_type":"","comment_count":"0","filter":"raw"},{"ID":109242,"post_author":"303","post_date":"2015-05-25 09:00:37","post_date_gmt":"2015-05-25 13:00:37","post_content":"\n\nThe lever-action rifle is alive and doing quite well among both domestic and foreign makers, and there\u2019s a wide field to choose from in selecting one for home-defense use. Imagine what you want it to do before you go shopping around. The centerfire models will have a fair amount of crossover in serving both the home front and the hunting camp, if that\u2019s important to you, and you can obviously stretch your money farther by extending the dual utility of a true rifle caliber. The so-called pistol-caliber lever guns have the advantage of less recoil and ammunition commonality with handguns that might be in the house, and in any of the magnum calibers they\u2019re still no slouch. With practical ranges out to 150 yards and more in the hands of a good shooter, they can also easily handle both defense and hunting chores within their practical limitations. See the gallery above to learn about six manufacturers selling lever-action rifles.\n\n \n\nFor More Information<\/strong>\n\nWinchester\nhttp:\/\/www.winchesterguns.com<\/a>\n\nMarlin Firearms\nhttp:\/\/www.marlinfirearms.com<\/a>\n\nBrowning\nhttp:\/\/www.browning.com<\/a>\n\nHenry Repeating Arms\nhttp:\/\/www.henryrifles.com<\/a>\n\nMossberg\nhttp:\/\/www.mossberg.com<\/a>\n\nRossi USA\nhttp:\/\/www.rossiusa.com<\/a>\n\n \n\nRelated Stories<\/strong>\n\n4 New Old West Guns For 2015<\/a>\n\nNew For 2015: Browning AB3 Hunter Rifle<\/a>\n\nNew For 2015: Winchester XPR Bolt-Action Rifle<\/a>\n\nNew Sporting Rifles for 2014 | Varmint, Hunting & Long-Range Roundup<\/a>\n\nGun Review: Mossberg\u2019s Duck Commanders<\/a>","post_title":"6 Manufacturers Selling Lever-Action Rifles For Home Defense Or Hunting","post_excerpt":"There's a wide field of both domestic and foreign manufacturers offering lever-action rifles for home defense and hunting.","post_status":"publish","comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","post_password":"","post_name":"6-manufacturers-selling-lever-action-rifles-for-home-defense-or-hunting","to_ping":"","pinged":"https:\/\/www.personaldefenseworld.com\/2015\/04\/4-new-old-west-guns-for-2015\/#4-new-old-west-guns-for-2015\nhttps:\/\/www.personaldefenseworld.com\/2015\/02\/new-2015-browning-ab3-hunter-rifle\/\nhttps:\/\/www.personaldefenseworld.com\/2015\/01\/new-2015-winchester-xpr-bolt-action-rifle\/\nhttps:\/\/www.tactical-life.com\/firearms\/new-sporting-rifles-for-2014\/","post_modified":"2023-05-31 12:06:54","post_modified_gmt":"2023-05-31 12:06:54","post_content_filtered":"","post_parent":0,"guid":"https:\/\/www.dev.athlonoutdoors.com\/2015\/05\/25\/6-manufacturers-selling-lever-action-rifles-for-home-defense-or-hunting\/","menu_order":0,"post_type":"post","post_mime_type":"","comment_count":"0","filter":"raw"}],"next":false,"prev":true,"total_page":12},"paged":1,"column_class":"jeg_col_2o3","class":"jnews_block_23"};

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\n

Marlin\u2019s .22-caliber Model Golden 39A rifle made its first appearance in 1891. It has been a favorite lever-action option for generations of shooters. MSRP comes in at $709. For even more info, please visit marlinfirearms.com<\/a>.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

Taylor\u2019s 1892 Alaskan Takedown<\/h4>\n\n\n\n
\"Takedown<\/figure>\n\n\n\n

Another rifle we've covered at length before<\/a>. Lever-action rifles are the classic takedown rifle design. Taylor\u2019s Alaskan in .44 Magnum is a modified 1892 Winchester design that is very popular with Alaskan bush pilots for backwoods shooting. Lastly, MSRP comes in at $1,366. For even more info, please visit taylorsfirearms.com<\/a>.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

H-S Precision VTD Pro-Series 2000<\/h4>\n\n\n\n
\"H-S
H-S Precision is bringing the art of the takedown rifle into the\nmodern era. The Pro-Series 2000 is a stainless steel, bolt-action takedown\nrifle with a 22- to 26-inch match-grade barrel that can be chambered in anything from .204 Ruger to .458 Lott. MSRP $5,495. <\/figcaption><\/figure>\n\n\n\n

H-S Precision is bringing the art of the takedown rifle into the modern era. The Pro-Series 2000 is a stainless steel, bolt-action takedown rifle with a 22- to 26-inch match-grade barrel that can be chambered in anything from .204 Ruger to .458 Lott. MSRP is a cool $5,495. For even more info, please visit hsprecision.com<\/a>.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

Dakota Arms Model 76 Traveler<\/h4>\n\n\n\n
\"Dakota<\/figure>\n\n\n\n

This is the Cadillac of takedown rifles. The Traveler is available in three grades\u2014 Classic, Safari and African\u2014and you can choose from a limitless array of upgrades. This rifle has a unique takedown system that offers threadless assembly and disassembly. It\u2019s available in calibers from .22-250 to .450 Dakota. Lastly is MSRP, which comes in at $8,890. For even more info, please visit dakotaarms.com<\/a>.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

Sauer 202 Take Down<\/h4>\n\n\n\n
\"Sauer
This rifle raises the bar on standard takedown rifles. It has a solid action with a receiver that can accommodate all calibers from 6.5x55mm up to the massive .458 Lott. Numerous options and calibers are available, including beautifully figured stocks of grade 4 Turkish walnut. MSRP: 6,333 to $10,607. <\/figcaption><\/figure>\n\n\n\n

This rifle raises the bar on standard takedown rifles. It has a solid action with a receiver that can accommodate all calibers from 6.5x55mm up to the massive .458 Lott. Numerous options and calibers are available, including beautifully figured stocks of grade 4 Turkish walnut. MSRP can get up there, ranging from $6,333 to $10,607. For even more info, please visit sauer.de\/en<\/a>.<\/p>\n","post_title":"6 High-Quality Takedown Rifles for Easy Transport","post_excerpt":"","post_status":"publish","comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","post_password":"","post_name":"best-takedown-rifles","to_ping":"","pinged":"","post_modified":"2023-10-31 22:40:55","post_modified_gmt":"2023-11-01 02:40:55","post_content_filtered":"","post_parent":0,"guid":"https:\/\/www.dev.athlonoutdoors.com\/2015\/08\/26\/best-takedown-rifles\/","menu_order":0,"post_type":"post","post_mime_type":"","comment_count":"0","filter":"raw"},{"ID":109186,"post_author":"303","post_date":"2015-05-28 09:45:25","post_date_gmt":"2015-05-28 13:45:25","post_content":"\n\nOne of the greatest fallacies for those looking to upgrade or augment their home defense arsenal with a new long gun is the idea that you can\u2019t possibly defend your hearth and homestead without military-grade hardware, sophisticated optics and a 200-round drum magazine. Statistics, and reality, argue against that concept in terms of absolute requirements for repelling borders and defending castle walls. Do you typically need to blow off 200 rounds in a single in-home encounter or shoot the wings off a gnat at 300 yards? Nope. Do you really need to be lugging a 12-pound defensive package around the house? No again. So, what do you need?\n\nFirst off, as with any tool, look at the job the tool needs to do. Forget hordes of angry villagers with torches at the gates, or even herds of innocent zombies just out for a midnight snack. The statistical norm for a home \u201cattack\u201d is one or two people attempting to break in for one of three reasons: intoxication, anger or theft. These run anywhere from the drunk mistaking your home for somebody else\u2019s, the ex-boyfriend out for revenge, the classic (and random) middle-of-the-night burglar and the organized home invasion. With the exception of the more \u201ctargeted\u201d home invasion, most threats to the occupants are not particularly well thought out, not highly organized and not normally carried out by more than one or two hostiles. Most are close up, do not involve either extended timeframes or extended distances and do not burn up truckloads of ammunition.\n\nAn apartment dweller would rarely be shooting 300 yards in defense of wife and child, and the family living in a quiet suburban cul-de-sac is unlikely to need to shoot beyond the boundaries of either front yard or back fence. Obviously, the remote ranch house an hour from the nearest 911 response is a different matter, but for the majority of us, the home-defense rifle simply doesn\u2019t have to be a heavy, high-capacity, credit-card buster.\n\n\"lever-action, A tall gold bead like this Marbles Carbine Blade comes standard on some lever guns and can be ordered from Brownells.[\/caption]\n\nGiven all that, why do we even want a rifle in the first place? There are several reasons\u2014a rifle tends to be more powerful than a handgun (even when firing handgun ammunition because of velocity gains through longer barrels), it\u2019s frequently easier for many to shoot well at varying distances than a handgun, it extends the practical range over a handgun, it can be more intimidating to an intruder than the average handgun, and the right rifle can be relatively quick for even a non-gunnie to learn and operate effectively.\n\nRELATED STORY: 6 Manufacturers Selling Lever-Action Rifles For Home Defense Or Hunting<\/a><\/strong>\n\nIn choosing your rifle priority one is reliability. It has to function, should be simple to operate and should not be subject to ammo sensitivity against a wide range of brands and bullet types. Priority two is power, which should be in a \u201cserious\u201d caliber, such as .38 Special on up. And priority three, believe it or not, brings accuracy in last. It\u2019s nice to be able to hit a marauding gnat at 300 yards, but in most cases if your home-defense rifle can hold inside 4 inches at 100 yards, it\u2019ll be good enough.\n\nAll of this leads up, as you\u2019ve noticed, to the humble lever-action rifle as a candidate for your home-defense arsenal.\n\nThere\u2019s nothing wrong with the idea of a lever action, however archaic you perceive it to be. The repeating lever action rifle in many calibers, several models and multiple configurations was one of the original home-defense tools for much of the Western half of the U.S. for well over half a century, where it was just as effective in that role as it was in the hands of generations of hunters who brought home food for the table using it.\n\n\"lever-action, One of the advantages of a lever action is that you can tell at a glance if it\u2019s cocked or not.[\/caption]\n\nThe design is simple to learn: Fill it up through the loading gate, work the lever to chamber a round, cock the hammer, pull the trigger to fire, repeat as necessary. No separate magazines to lose or have fail to seat completely, no complicated controls to remember, no scope to knock loose, fog, or blur out at inside-the-house distances, no dead batteries, and less chance of \u201cspray-and-pray\u201d shooting as opposed to the average semi-auto like an AK-47 or AR-15.\n\nMagazine capacity, of course, is much less, but six to 10 rounds in a lever gun should easily handle 95 percent of the home-defense scenarios most of us are likely to encounter.\n\nWhich one should you choose? Look in your gun safe. You may already have what you need, whether it\u2019s Grandpa\u2019s old hand-me-down Winchester<\/a> in .30-30, a modern Browning BLR<\/a> in .308 Winchester, or even your Cowboy Action Shooting competition Marlin<\/a> or Uberti<\/a>. If not, evaluate your layout and decide whether you want the additional power and range for both indoor and outdoor applications of a centerfire rifle cartridge like the .30-30 or .308, or if a handgun caliber that\u2019ll be softer on the eardrums indoors while still easily carrying 50 or 75 yards outdoors would be a better choice.\n\nFor some, the utility of stockpiling one load for rifle and handgun, like the .357 Mag or .45 Colt, is a further consideration. For others, the ability of family members to tolerate recoil is a factor, and while I do recommend something heavier, in such cases the rimfires in .22 LR, .22 Mag and the hotter .17 calibers may be a better choice with no disconcerting recoil or extreme muzzle blast. My wife has two much-beloved Marlin 1894s<\/a> in .32-20 from her cowboy competition days. She knows them intimately, she shoots them better than anything else in the vault, and in her case, she\u2019d be far better off with her Marlins than with any of my tricked-out AR-15s if it came to somebody kicking our front door in.\n\nClose Quarters<\/strong>\n\n\"lever-action, \u201cShorter barrels can shoot every bit as accurately as longer barrels, and they maneuver infinitely better through tight confines\u2026 \u201d[\/caption]\n\nIndoor practicality dictates a short barrel. Shorter barrels can shoot every bit as accurately as longer barrels, and they maneuver infinitely better through tight confines and angles if you have to. The general recommendation in case of loud noises in the middle of the night is to congregate with a phone in one defensible location in the home while waiting for the sirens, but sometimes you have to do what you have to do, and a short, light, handy lever-action carbine just navigates easier all the way round than a longer barrel does. I do own Grandpa\u2019s old Winchester Model 94<\/a> in .30-30, and its 20-inch barrel is the longest I\u2019d go on a home-defense carbine by choice. I also have a 24-inch Marlin 1894 in .45 Colt that I could tolerate reasonably well, if it was all I had. Keep in mind that octagonal barrels will be heavier than round, and the shorter you go the less magazine capacity. There\u2019s no absolute, so buy what works best for you, or use what you already have if money\u2019s tight.\n\nRELATED STORY: Uberti\u2019s Silverboy Lever-Action Rifle in .22 LR<\/a><\/strong>\n\nLever action sights may not be outstanding, but they are typically usable as they come. The standard blade front\/notch rear is perfectly adequate for most shooters with decent eyesight out to 75 yards and farther, if necessary. Most can be easily adjusted out to 100 yards and used without expensive aftermarket products. If you do want refinements, an aperture rear can help with distances and a white-outline front blade, or a gold bead, can help line things up in darker lighting. Various methods of mounting scopes exist, with Marlins and Brownings being the easiest as they come pre-drilled and tapped for an optic. Indoors, a scope works against you and outdoors it can work for you, but it tends to slow down target acquisition. A good set of iron sights can put you right on target, right now, and that\u2019s important in close-up encounters.\n\nMost classic lever guns use under-barrel tube magazines, from the traditional side-loading Winchester to the \u201crimfire style\u201d on many .22 lever actions and on the Henry<\/a> rimfires and centerfires, where rounds are loaded through a port in the forward section of the magazine tube itself. The Browning BLR uses a detachable box magazine. In the most common home-defense context, there\u2019s no real advantage to any of these types since you\u2019re not looking at speed reloads anyway.\n\nIn the heavier calibers, consider a good recoil pad, if the new carbine doesn\u2019t already have one. The .30-30 is a fairly mild round for a rifle, but its stock design can punch a shoulder smartly with a solid steel or composite buttplate. Same with the .44 Mag caliber. You\u2019ll get more cooperation in learning and practice from family members if you reduce the \u201couch\u201d factor going in.\n\nThreat Takedown<\/strong>\n\n\"lever-action-rifles-7\"\n\nLearn how to work your home with your new lever gun once you make your choice. Take corners wide, where possible. Don\u2019t walk into a room or round a blind corner barrel-first\u2014you don\u2019t know who might be there to grab it. Don\u2019t round a close corner muzzle-up, it\u2019s too easy for an intruder to deflect the barrel or disarm you entirely. Navigate tight corners and doorways muzzle-down, making the gun harder to grab or deflect, and you can simply drop to one knee while pivoting the barrel up and firing if it is grabbed. Remember, the carbine can also make a very effective impact weapon, but make absolutely sure anybody using it understands whatever safety mechanism it may have. Simple, fast, light, reliable and affordable, the lever action still has a place.\n\nRELATED STORY: 15 New Guns and Accessories in the \"Old West\"<\/a><\/strong>","post_title":"Lifesaving Lever-Action Rifles For Home Defense","post_excerpt":"These classic lever-action rifles deliver reliable home-defense firepower when it matters most!","post_status":"publish","comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","post_password":"","post_name":"lifesaving-lever-action-rifles-for-home-defense","to_ping":"","pinged":"\nhttps:\/\/gunsoftheoldwest.com\/2015\/04\/15-new-guns-and-accessories-in-the-old-west\/","post_modified":"2023-05-31 12:06:26","post_modified_gmt":"2023-05-31 12:06:26","post_content_filtered":"","post_parent":0,"guid":"https:\/\/www.dev.athlonoutdoors.com\/2015\/05\/28\/lifesaving-lever-action-rifles-for-home-defense\/","menu_order":0,"post_type":"post","post_mime_type":"","comment_count":"0","filter":"raw"},{"ID":109242,"post_author":"303","post_date":"2015-05-25 09:00:37","post_date_gmt":"2015-05-25 13:00:37","post_content":"\n\nThe lever-action rifle is alive and doing quite well among both domestic and foreign makers, and there\u2019s a wide field to choose from in selecting one for home-defense use. Imagine what you want it to do before you go shopping around. The centerfire models will have a fair amount of crossover in serving both the home front and the hunting camp, if that\u2019s important to you, and you can obviously stretch your money farther by extending the dual utility of a true rifle caliber. The so-called pistol-caliber lever guns have the advantage of less recoil and ammunition commonality with handguns that might be in the house, and in any of the magnum calibers they\u2019re still no slouch. With practical ranges out to 150 yards and more in the hands of a good shooter, they can also easily handle both defense and hunting chores within their practical limitations. See the gallery above to learn about six manufacturers selling lever-action rifles.\n\n \n\nFor More Information<\/strong>\n\nWinchester\nhttp:\/\/www.winchesterguns.com<\/a>\n\nMarlin Firearms\nhttp:\/\/www.marlinfirearms.com<\/a>\n\nBrowning\nhttp:\/\/www.browning.com<\/a>\n\nHenry Repeating Arms\nhttp:\/\/www.henryrifles.com<\/a>\n\nMossberg\nhttp:\/\/www.mossberg.com<\/a>\n\nRossi USA\nhttp:\/\/www.rossiusa.com<\/a>\n\n \n\nRelated Stories<\/strong>\n\n4 New Old West Guns For 2015<\/a>\n\nNew For 2015: Browning AB3 Hunter Rifle<\/a>\n\nNew For 2015: Winchester XPR Bolt-Action Rifle<\/a>\n\nNew Sporting Rifles for 2014 | Varmint, Hunting & Long-Range Roundup<\/a>\n\nGun Review: Mossberg\u2019s Duck Commanders<\/a>","post_title":"6 Manufacturers Selling Lever-Action Rifles For Home Defense Or Hunting","post_excerpt":"There's a wide field of both domestic and foreign manufacturers offering lever-action rifles for home defense and hunting.","post_status":"publish","comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","post_password":"","post_name":"6-manufacturers-selling-lever-action-rifles-for-home-defense-or-hunting","to_ping":"","pinged":"https:\/\/www.personaldefenseworld.com\/2015\/04\/4-new-old-west-guns-for-2015\/#4-new-old-west-guns-for-2015\nhttps:\/\/www.personaldefenseworld.com\/2015\/02\/new-2015-browning-ab3-hunter-rifle\/\nhttps:\/\/www.personaldefenseworld.com\/2015\/01\/new-2015-winchester-xpr-bolt-action-rifle\/\nhttps:\/\/www.tactical-life.com\/firearms\/new-sporting-rifles-for-2014\/","post_modified":"2023-05-31 12:06:54","post_modified_gmt":"2023-05-31 12:06:54","post_content_filtered":"","post_parent":0,"guid":"https:\/\/www.dev.athlonoutdoors.com\/2015\/05\/25\/6-manufacturers-selling-lever-action-rifles-for-home-defense-or-hunting\/","menu_order":0,"post_type":"post","post_mime_type":"","comment_count":"0","filter":"raw"}],"next":false,"prev":true,"total_page":12},"paged":1,"column_class":"jeg_col_2o3","class":"jnews_block_23"};

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\n
\"Takedown
Marlin\u2019s .22-caliber Model Golden 39A rifle made its first appearance in 1891. It has been a favorite lever-action option for generations of shooters. MSRP: $709. <\/figcaption><\/figure>\n\n\n\n

Marlin\u2019s .22-caliber Model Golden 39A rifle made its first appearance in 1891. It has been a favorite lever-action option for generations of shooters. MSRP comes in at $709. For even more info, please visit marlinfirearms.com<\/a>.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

Taylor\u2019s 1892 Alaskan Takedown<\/h4>\n\n\n\n
\"Takedown<\/figure>\n\n\n\n

Another rifle we've covered at length before<\/a>. Lever-action rifles are the classic takedown rifle design. Taylor\u2019s Alaskan in .44 Magnum is a modified 1892 Winchester design that is very popular with Alaskan bush pilots for backwoods shooting. Lastly, MSRP comes in at $1,366. For even more info, please visit taylorsfirearms.com<\/a>.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

H-S Precision VTD Pro-Series 2000<\/h4>\n\n\n\n
\"H-S
H-S Precision is bringing the art of the takedown rifle into the\nmodern era. The Pro-Series 2000 is a stainless steel, bolt-action takedown\nrifle with a 22- to 26-inch match-grade barrel that can be chambered in anything from .204 Ruger to .458 Lott. MSRP $5,495. <\/figcaption><\/figure>\n\n\n\n

H-S Precision is bringing the art of the takedown rifle into the modern era. The Pro-Series 2000 is a stainless steel, bolt-action takedown rifle with a 22- to 26-inch match-grade barrel that can be chambered in anything from .204 Ruger to .458 Lott. MSRP is a cool $5,495. For even more info, please visit hsprecision.com<\/a>.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

Dakota Arms Model 76 Traveler<\/h4>\n\n\n\n
\"Dakota<\/figure>\n\n\n\n

This is the Cadillac of takedown rifles. The Traveler is available in three grades\u2014 Classic, Safari and African\u2014and you can choose from a limitless array of upgrades. This rifle has a unique takedown system that offers threadless assembly and disassembly. It\u2019s available in calibers from .22-250 to .450 Dakota. Lastly is MSRP, which comes in at $8,890. For even more info, please visit dakotaarms.com<\/a>.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

Sauer 202 Take Down<\/h4>\n\n\n\n
\"Sauer
This rifle raises the bar on standard takedown rifles. It has a solid action with a receiver that can accommodate all calibers from 6.5x55mm up to the massive .458 Lott. Numerous options and calibers are available, including beautifully figured stocks of grade 4 Turkish walnut. MSRP: 6,333 to $10,607. <\/figcaption><\/figure>\n\n\n\n

This rifle raises the bar on standard takedown rifles. It has a solid action with a receiver that can accommodate all calibers from 6.5x55mm up to the massive .458 Lott. Numerous options and calibers are available, including beautifully figured stocks of grade 4 Turkish walnut. MSRP can get up there, ranging from $6,333 to $10,607. For even more info, please visit sauer.de\/en<\/a>.<\/p>\n","post_title":"6 High-Quality Takedown Rifles for Easy Transport","post_excerpt":"","post_status":"publish","comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","post_password":"","post_name":"best-takedown-rifles","to_ping":"","pinged":"","post_modified":"2023-10-31 22:40:55","post_modified_gmt":"2023-11-01 02:40:55","post_content_filtered":"","post_parent":0,"guid":"https:\/\/www.dev.athlonoutdoors.com\/2015\/08\/26\/best-takedown-rifles\/","menu_order":0,"post_type":"post","post_mime_type":"","comment_count":"0","filter":"raw"},{"ID":109186,"post_author":"303","post_date":"2015-05-28 09:45:25","post_date_gmt":"2015-05-28 13:45:25","post_content":"\n\nOne of the greatest fallacies for those looking to upgrade or augment their home defense arsenal with a new long gun is the idea that you can\u2019t possibly defend your hearth and homestead without military-grade hardware, sophisticated optics and a 200-round drum magazine. Statistics, and reality, argue against that concept in terms of absolute requirements for repelling borders and defending castle walls. Do you typically need to blow off 200 rounds in a single in-home encounter or shoot the wings off a gnat at 300 yards? Nope. Do you really need to be lugging a 12-pound defensive package around the house? No again. So, what do you need?\n\nFirst off, as with any tool, look at the job the tool needs to do. Forget hordes of angry villagers with torches at the gates, or even herds of innocent zombies just out for a midnight snack. The statistical norm for a home \u201cattack\u201d is one or two people attempting to break in for one of three reasons: intoxication, anger or theft. These run anywhere from the drunk mistaking your home for somebody else\u2019s, the ex-boyfriend out for revenge, the classic (and random) middle-of-the-night burglar and the organized home invasion. With the exception of the more \u201ctargeted\u201d home invasion, most threats to the occupants are not particularly well thought out, not highly organized and not normally carried out by more than one or two hostiles. Most are close up, do not involve either extended timeframes or extended distances and do not burn up truckloads of ammunition.\n\nAn apartment dweller would rarely be shooting 300 yards in defense of wife and child, and the family living in a quiet suburban cul-de-sac is unlikely to need to shoot beyond the boundaries of either front yard or back fence. Obviously, the remote ranch house an hour from the nearest 911 response is a different matter, but for the majority of us, the home-defense rifle simply doesn\u2019t have to be a heavy, high-capacity, credit-card buster.\n\n\"lever-action, A tall gold bead like this Marbles Carbine Blade comes standard on some lever guns and can be ordered from Brownells.[\/caption]\n\nGiven all that, why do we even want a rifle in the first place? There are several reasons\u2014a rifle tends to be more powerful than a handgun (even when firing handgun ammunition because of velocity gains through longer barrels), it\u2019s frequently easier for many to shoot well at varying distances than a handgun, it extends the practical range over a handgun, it can be more intimidating to an intruder than the average handgun, and the right rifle can be relatively quick for even a non-gunnie to learn and operate effectively.\n\nRELATED STORY: 6 Manufacturers Selling Lever-Action Rifles For Home Defense Or Hunting<\/a><\/strong>\n\nIn choosing your rifle priority one is reliability. It has to function, should be simple to operate and should not be subject to ammo sensitivity against a wide range of brands and bullet types. Priority two is power, which should be in a \u201cserious\u201d caliber, such as .38 Special on up. And priority three, believe it or not, brings accuracy in last. It\u2019s nice to be able to hit a marauding gnat at 300 yards, but in most cases if your home-defense rifle can hold inside 4 inches at 100 yards, it\u2019ll be good enough.\n\nAll of this leads up, as you\u2019ve noticed, to the humble lever-action rifle as a candidate for your home-defense arsenal.\n\nThere\u2019s nothing wrong with the idea of a lever action, however archaic you perceive it to be. The repeating lever action rifle in many calibers, several models and multiple configurations was one of the original home-defense tools for much of the Western half of the U.S. for well over half a century, where it was just as effective in that role as it was in the hands of generations of hunters who brought home food for the table using it.\n\n\"lever-action, One of the advantages of a lever action is that you can tell at a glance if it\u2019s cocked or not.[\/caption]\n\nThe design is simple to learn: Fill it up through the loading gate, work the lever to chamber a round, cock the hammer, pull the trigger to fire, repeat as necessary. No separate magazines to lose or have fail to seat completely, no complicated controls to remember, no scope to knock loose, fog, or blur out at inside-the-house distances, no dead batteries, and less chance of \u201cspray-and-pray\u201d shooting as opposed to the average semi-auto like an AK-47 or AR-15.\n\nMagazine capacity, of course, is much less, but six to 10 rounds in a lever gun should easily handle 95 percent of the home-defense scenarios most of us are likely to encounter.\n\nWhich one should you choose? Look in your gun safe. You may already have what you need, whether it\u2019s Grandpa\u2019s old hand-me-down Winchester<\/a> in .30-30, a modern Browning BLR<\/a> in .308 Winchester, or even your Cowboy Action Shooting competition Marlin<\/a> or Uberti<\/a>. If not, evaluate your layout and decide whether you want the additional power and range for both indoor and outdoor applications of a centerfire rifle cartridge like the .30-30 or .308, or if a handgun caliber that\u2019ll be softer on the eardrums indoors while still easily carrying 50 or 75 yards outdoors would be a better choice.\n\nFor some, the utility of stockpiling one load for rifle and handgun, like the .357 Mag or .45 Colt, is a further consideration. For others, the ability of family members to tolerate recoil is a factor, and while I do recommend something heavier, in such cases the rimfires in .22 LR, .22 Mag and the hotter .17 calibers may be a better choice with no disconcerting recoil or extreme muzzle blast. My wife has two much-beloved Marlin 1894s<\/a> in .32-20 from her cowboy competition days. She knows them intimately, she shoots them better than anything else in the vault, and in her case, she\u2019d be far better off with her Marlins than with any of my tricked-out AR-15s if it came to somebody kicking our front door in.\n\nClose Quarters<\/strong>\n\n\"lever-action, \u201cShorter barrels can shoot every bit as accurately as longer barrels, and they maneuver infinitely better through tight confines\u2026 \u201d[\/caption]\n\nIndoor practicality dictates a short barrel. Shorter barrels can shoot every bit as accurately as longer barrels, and they maneuver infinitely better through tight confines and angles if you have to. The general recommendation in case of loud noises in the middle of the night is to congregate with a phone in one defensible location in the home while waiting for the sirens, but sometimes you have to do what you have to do, and a short, light, handy lever-action carbine just navigates easier all the way round than a longer barrel does. I do own Grandpa\u2019s old Winchester Model 94<\/a> in .30-30, and its 20-inch barrel is the longest I\u2019d go on a home-defense carbine by choice. I also have a 24-inch Marlin 1894 in .45 Colt that I could tolerate reasonably well, if it was all I had. Keep in mind that octagonal barrels will be heavier than round, and the shorter you go the less magazine capacity. There\u2019s no absolute, so buy what works best for you, or use what you already have if money\u2019s tight.\n\nRELATED STORY: Uberti\u2019s Silverboy Lever-Action Rifle in .22 LR<\/a><\/strong>\n\nLever action sights may not be outstanding, but they are typically usable as they come. The standard blade front\/notch rear is perfectly adequate for most shooters with decent eyesight out to 75 yards and farther, if necessary. Most can be easily adjusted out to 100 yards and used without expensive aftermarket products. If you do want refinements, an aperture rear can help with distances and a white-outline front blade, or a gold bead, can help line things up in darker lighting. Various methods of mounting scopes exist, with Marlins and Brownings being the easiest as they come pre-drilled and tapped for an optic. Indoors, a scope works against you and outdoors it can work for you, but it tends to slow down target acquisition. A good set of iron sights can put you right on target, right now, and that\u2019s important in close-up encounters.\n\nMost classic lever guns use under-barrel tube magazines, from the traditional side-loading Winchester to the \u201crimfire style\u201d on many .22 lever actions and on the Henry<\/a> rimfires and centerfires, where rounds are loaded through a port in the forward section of the magazine tube itself. The Browning BLR uses a detachable box magazine. In the most common home-defense context, there\u2019s no real advantage to any of these types since you\u2019re not looking at speed reloads anyway.\n\nIn the heavier calibers, consider a good recoil pad, if the new carbine doesn\u2019t already have one. The .30-30 is a fairly mild round for a rifle, but its stock design can punch a shoulder smartly with a solid steel or composite buttplate. Same with the .44 Mag caliber. You\u2019ll get more cooperation in learning and practice from family members if you reduce the \u201couch\u201d factor going in.\n\nThreat Takedown<\/strong>\n\n\"lever-action-rifles-7\"\n\nLearn how to work your home with your new lever gun once you make your choice. Take corners wide, where possible. Don\u2019t walk into a room or round a blind corner barrel-first\u2014you don\u2019t know who might be there to grab it. Don\u2019t round a close corner muzzle-up, it\u2019s too easy for an intruder to deflect the barrel or disarm you entirely. Navigate tight corners and doorways muzzle-down, making the gun harder to grab or deflect, and you can simply drop to one knee while pivoting the barrel up and firing if it is grabbed. Remember, the carbine can also make a very effective impact weapon, but make absolutely sure anybody using it understands whatever safety mechanism it may have. Simple, fast, light, reliable and affordable, the lever action still has a place.\n\nRELATED STORY: 15 New Guns and Accessories in the \"Old West\"<\/a><\/strong>","post_title":"Lifesaving Lever-Action Rifles For Home Defense","post_excerpt":"These classic lever-action rifles deliver reliable home-defense firepower when it matters most!","post_status":"publish","comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","post_password":"","post_name":"lifesaving-lever-action-rifles-for-home-defense","to_ping":"","pinged":"\nhttps:\/\/gunsoftheoldwest.com\/2015\/04\/15-new-guns-and-accessories-in-the-old-west\/","post_modified":"2023-05-31 12:06:26","post_modified_gmt":"2023-05-31 12:06:26","post_content_filtered":"","post_parent":0,"guid":"https:\/\/www.dev.athlonoutdoors.com\/2015\/05\/28\/lifesaving-lever-action-rifles-for-home-defense\/","menu_order":0,"post_type":"post","post_mime_type":"","comment_count":"0","filter":"raw"},{"ID":109242,"post_author":"303","post_date":"2015-05-25 09:00:37","post_date_gmt":"2015-05-25 13:00:37","post_content":"\n\nThe lever-action rifle is alive and doing quite well among both domestic and foreign makers, and there\u2019s a wide field to choose from in selecting one for home-defense use. Imagine what you want it to do before you go shopping around. The centerfire models will have a fair amount of crossover in serving both the home front and the hunting camp, if that\u2019s important to you, and you can obviously stretch your money farther by extending the dual utility of a true rifle caliber. The so-called pistol-caliber lever guns have the advantage of less recoil and ammunition commonality with handguns that might be in the house, and in any of the magnum calibers they\u2019re still no slouch. With practical ranges out to 150 yards and more in the hands of a good shooter, they can also easily handle both defense and hunting chores within their practical limitations. See the gallery above to learn about six manufacturers selling lever-action rifles.\n\n \n\nFor More Information<\/strong>\n\nWinchester\nhttp:\/\/www.winchesterguns.com<\/a>\n\nMarlin Firearms\nhttp:\/\/www.marlinfirearms.com<\/a>\n\nBrowning\nhttp:\/\/www.browning.com<\/a>\n\nHenry Repeating Arms\nhttp:\/\/www.henryrifles.com<\/a>\n\nMossberg\nhttp:\/\/www.mossberg.com<\/a>\n\nRossi USA\nhttp:\/\/www.rossiusa.com<\/a>\n\n \n\nRelated Stories<\/strong>\n\n4 New Old West Guns For 2015<\/a>\n\nNew For 2015: Browning AB3 Hunter Rifle<\/a>\n\nNew For 2015: Winchester XPR Bolt-Action Rifle<\/a>\n\nNew Sporting Rifles for 2014 | Varmint, Hunting & Long-Range Roundup<\/a>\n\nGun Review: Mossberg\u2019s Duck Commanders<\/a>","post_title":"6 Manufacturers Selling Lever-Action Rifles For Home Defense Or Hunting","post_excerpt":"There's a wide field of both domestic and foreign manufacturers offering lever-action rifles for home defense and hunting.","post_status":"publish","comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","post_password":"","post_name":"6-manufacturers-selling-lever-action-rifles-for-home-defense-or-hunting","to_ping":"","pinged":"https:\/\/www.personaldefenseworld.com\/2015\/04\/4-new-old-west-guns-for-2015\/#4-new-old-west-guns-for-2015\nhttps:\/\/www.personaldefenseworld.com\/2015\/02\/new-2015-browning-ab3-hunter-rifle\/\nhttps:\/\/www.personaldefenseworld.com\/2015\/01\/new-2015-winchester-xpr-bolt-action-rifle\/\nhttps:\/\/www.tactical-life.com\/firearms\/new-sporting-rifles-for-2014\/","post_modified":"2023-05-31 12:06:54","post_modified_gmt":"2023-05-31 12:06:54","post_content_filtered":"","post_parent":0,"guid":"https:\/\/www.dev.athlonoutdoors.com\/2015\/05\/25\/6-manufacturers-selling-lever-action-rifles-for-home-defense-or-hunting\/","menu_order":0,"post_type":"post","post_mime_type":"","comment_count":"0","filter":"raw"}],"next":false,"prev":true,"total_page":12},"paged":1,"column_class":"jeg_col_2o3","class":"jnews_block_23"};

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Marlin Model Golden 39A<\/h4>\n\n\n\n
\"Takedown
Marlin\u2019s .22-caliber Model Golden 39A rifle made its first appearance in 1891. It has been a favorite lever-action option for generations of shooters. MSRP: $709. <\/figcaption><\/figure>\n\n\n\n

Marlin\u2019s .22-caliber Model Golden 39A rifle made its first appearance in 1891. It has been a favorite lever-action option for generations of shooters. MSRP comes in at $709. For even more info, please visit marlinfirearms.com<\/a>.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

Taylor\u2019s 1892 Alaskan Takedown<\/h4>\n\n\n\n
\"Takedown<\/figure>\n\n\n\n

Another rifle we've covered at length before<\/a>. Lever-action rifles are the classic takedown rifle design. Taylor\u2019s Alaskan in .44 Magnum is a modified 1892 Winchester design that is very popular with Alaskan bush pilots for backwoods shooting. Lastly, MSRP comes in at $1,366. For even more info, please visit taylorsfirearms.com<\/a>.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

H-S Precision VTD Pro-Series 2000<\/h4>\n\n\n\n
\"H-S
H-S Precision is bringing the art of the takedown rifle into the\nmodern era. The Pro-Series 2000 is a stainless steel, bolt-action takedown\nrifle with a 22- to 26-inch match-grade barrel that can be chambered in anything from .204 Ruger to .458 Lott. MSRP $5,495. <\/figcaption><\/figure>\n\n\n\n

H-S Precision is bringing the art of the takedown rifle into the modern era. The Pro-Series 2000 is a stainless steel, bolt-action takedown rifle with a 22- to 26-inch match-grade barrel that can be chambered in anything from .204 Ruger to .458 Lott. MSRP is a cool $5,495. For even more info, please visit hsprecision.com<\/a>.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

Dakota Arms Model 76 Traveler<\/h4>\n\n\n\n
\"Dakota<\/figure>\n\n\n\n

This is the Cadillac of takedown rifles. The Traveler is available in three grades\u2014 Classic, Safari and African\u2014and you can choose from a limitless array of upgrades. This rifle has a unique takedown system that offers threadless assembly and disassembly. It\u2019s available in calibers from .22-250 to .450 Dakota. Lastly is MSRP, which comes in at $8,890. For even more info, please visit dakotaarms.com<\/a>.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

Sauer 202 Take Down<\/h4>\n\n\n\n
\"Sauer
This rifle raises the bar on standard takedown rifles. It has a solid action with a receiver that can accommodate all calibers from 6.5x55mm up to the massive .458 Lott. Numerous options and calibers are available, including beautifully figured stocks of grade 4 Turkish walnut. MSRP: 6,333 to $10,607. <\/figcaption><\/figure>\n\n\n\n

This rifle raises the bar on standard takedown rifles. It has a solid action with a receiver that can accommodate all calibers from 6.5x55mm up to the massive .458 Lott. Numerous options and calibers are available, including beautifully figured stocks of grade 4 Turkish walnut. MSRP can get up there, ranging from $6,333 to $10,607. For even more info, please visit sauer.de\/en<\/a>.<\/p>\n","post_title":"6 High-Quality Takedown Rifles for Easy Transport","post_excerpt":"","post_status":"publish","comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","post_password":"","post_name":"best-takedown-rifles","to_ping":"","pinged":"","post_modified":"2023-10-31 22:40:55","post_modified_gmt":"2023-11-01 02:40:55","post_content_filtered":"","post_parent":0,"guid":"https:\/\/www.dev.athlonoutdoors.com\/2015\/08\/26\/best-takedown-rifles\/","menu_order":0,"post_type":"post","post_mime_type":"","comment_count":"0","filter":"raw"},{"ID":109186,"post_author":"303","post_date":"2015-05-28 09:45:25","post_date_gmt":"2015-05-28 13:45:25","post_content":"\n\nOne of the greatest fallacies for those looking to upgrade or augment their home defense arsenal with a new long gun is the idea that you can\u2019t possibly defend your hearth and homestead without military-grade hardware, sophisticated optics and a 200-round drum magazine. Statistics, and reality, argue against that concept in terms of absolute requirements for repelling borders and defending castle walls. Do you typically need to blow off 200 rounds in a single in-home encounter or shoot the wings off a gnat at 300 yards? Nope. Do you really need to be lugging a 12-pound defensive package around the house? No again. So, what do you need?\n\nFirst off, as with any tool, look at the job the tool needs to do. Forget hordes of angry villagers with torches at the gates, or even herds of innocent zombies just out for a midnight snack. The statistical norm for a home \u201cattack\u201d is one or two people attempting to break in for one of three reasons: intoxication, anger or theft. These run anywhere from the drunk mistaking your home for somebody else\u2019s, the ex-boyfriend out for revenge, the classic (and random) middle-of-the-night burglar and the organized home invasion. With the exception of the more \u201ctargeted\u201d home invasion, most threats to the occupants are not particularly well thought out, not highly organized and not normally carried out by more than one or two hostiles. Most are close up, do not involve either extended timeframes or extended distances and do not burn up truckloads of ammunition.\n\nAn apartment dweller would rarely be shooting 300 yards in defense of wife and child, and the family living in a quiet suburban cul-de-sac is unlikely to need to shoot beyond the boundaries of either front yard or back fence. Obviously, the remote ranch house an hour from the nearest 911 response is a different matter, but for the majority of us, the home-defense rifle simply doesn\u2019t have to be a heavy, high-capacity, credit-card buster.\n\n\"lever-action, A tall gold bead like this Marbles Carbine Blade comes standard on some lever guns and can be ordered from Brownells.[\/caption]\n\nGiven all that, why do we even want a rifle in the first place? There are several reasons\u2014a rifle tends to be more powerful than a handgun (even when firing handgun ammunition because of velocity gains through longer barrels), it\u2019s frequently easier for many to shoot well at varying distances than a handgun, it extends the practical range over a handgun, it can be more intimidating to an intruder than the average handgun, and the right rifle can be relatively quick for even a non-gunnie to learn and operate effectively.\n\nRELATED STORY: 6 Manufacturers Selling Lever-Action Rifles For Home Defense Or Hunting<\/a><\/strong>\n\nIn choosing your rifle priority one is reliability. It has to function, should be simple to operate and should not be subject to ammo sensitivity against a wide range of brands and bullet types. Priority two is power, which should be in a \u201cserious\u201d caliber, such as .38 Special on up. And priority three, believe it or not, brings accuracy in last. It\u2019s nice to be able to hit a marauding gnat at 300 yards, but in most cases if your home-defense rifle can hold inside 4 inches at 100 yards, it\u2019ll be good enough.\n\nAll of this leads up, as you\u2019ve noticed, to the humble lever-action rifle as a candidate for your home-defense arsenal.\n\nThere\u2019s nothing wrong with the idea of a lever action, however archaic you perceive it to be. The repeating lever action rifle in many calibers, several models and multiple configurations was one of the original home-defense tools for much of the Western half of the U.S. for well over half a century, where it was just as effective in that role as it was in the hands of generations of hunters who brought home food for the table using it.\n\n\"lever-action, One of the advantages of a lever action is that you can tell at a glance if it\u2019s cocked or not.[\/caption]\n\nThe design is simple to learn: Fill it up through the loading gate, work the lever to chamber a round, cock the hammer, pull the trigger to fire, repeat as necessary. No separate magazines to lose or have fail to seat completely, no complicated controls to remember, no scope to knock loose, fog, or blur out at inside-the-house distances, no dead batteries, and less chance of \u201cspray-and-pray\u201d shooting as opposed to the average semi-auto like an AK-47 or AR-15.\n\nMagazine capacity, of course, is much less, but six to 10 rounds in a lever gun should easily handle 95 percent of the home-defense scenarios most of us are likely to encounter.\n\nWhich one should you choose? Look in your gun safe. You may already have what you need, whether it\u2019s Grandpa\u2019s old hand-me-down Winchester<\/a> in .30-30, a modern Browning BLR<\/a> in .308 Winchester, or even your Cowboy Action Shooting competition Marlin<\/a> or Uberti<\/a>. If not, evaluate your layout and decide whether you want the additional power and range for both indoor and outdoor applications of a centerfire rifle cartridge like the .30-30 or .308, or if a handgun caliber that\u2019ll be softer on the eardrums indoors while still easily carrying 50 or 75 yards outdoors would be a better choice.\n\nFor some, the utility of stockpiling one load for rifle and handgun, like the .357 Mag or .45 Colt, is a further consideration. For others, the ability of family members to tolerate recoil is a factor, and while I do recommend something heavier, in such cases the rimfires in .22 LR, .22 Mag and the hotter .17 calibers may be a better choice with no disconcerting recoil or extreme muzzle blast. My wife has two much-beloved Marlin 1894s<\/a> in .32-20 from her cowboy competition days. She knows them intimately, she shoots them better than anything else in the vault, and in her case, she\u2019d be far better off with her Marlins than with any of my tricked-out AR-15s if it came to somebody kicking our front door in.\n\nClose Quarters<\/strong>\n\n\"lever-action, \u201cShorter barrels can shoot every bit as accurately as longer barrels, and they maneuver infinitely better through tight confines\u2026 \u201d[\/caption]\n\nIndoor practicality dictates a short barrel. Shorter barrels can shoot every bit as accurately as longer barrels, and they maneuver infinitely better through tight confines and angles if you have to. The general recommendation in case of loud noises in the middle of the night is to congregate with a phone in one defensible location in the home while waiting for the sirens, but sometimes you have to do what you have to do, and a short, light, handy lever-action carbine just navigates easier all the way round than a longer barrel does. I do own Grandpa\u2019s old Winchester Model 94<\/a> in .30-30, and its 20-inch barrel is the longest I\u2019d go on a home-defense carbine by choice. I also have a 24-inch Marlin 1894 in .45 Colt that I could tolerate reasonably well, if it was all I had. Keep in mind that octagonal barrels will be heavier than round, and the shorter you go the less magazine capacity. There\u2019s no absolute, so buy what works best for you, or use what you already have if money\u2019s tight.\n\nRELATED STORY: Uberti\u2019s Silverboy Lever-Action Rifle in .22 LR<\/a><\/strong>\n\nLever action sights may not be outstanding, but they are typically usable as they come. The standard blade front\/notch rear is perfectly adequate for most shooters with decent eyesight out to 75 yards and farther, if necessary. Most can be easily adjusted out to 100 yards and used without expensive aftermarket products. If you do want refinements, an aperture rear can help with distances and a white-outline front blade, or a gold bead, can help line things up in darker lighting. Various methods of mounting scopes exist, with Marlins and Brownings being the easiest as they come pre-drilled and tapped for an optic. Indoors, a scope works against you and outdoors it can work for you, but it tends to slow down target acquisition. A good set of iron sights can put you right on target, right now, and that\u2019s important in close-up encounters.\n\nMost classic lever guns use under-barrel tube magazines, from the traditional side-loading Winchester to the \u201crimfire style\u201d on many .22 lever actions and on the Henry<\/a> rimfires and centerfires, where rounds are loaded through a port in the forward section of the magazine tube itself. The Browning BLR uses a detachable box magazine. In the most common home-defense context, there\u2019s no real advantage to any of these types since you\u2019re not looking at speed reloads anyway.\n\nIn the heavier calibers, consider a good recoil pad, if the new carbine doesn\u2019t already have one. The .30-30 is a fairly mild round for a rifle, but its stock design can punch a shoulder smartly with a solid steel or composite buttplate. Same with the .44 Mag caliber. You\u2019ll get more cooperation in learning and practice from family members if you reduce the \u201couch\u201d factor going in.\n\nThreat Takedown<\/strong>\n\n\"lever-action-rifles-7\"\n\nLearn how to work your home with your new lever gun once you make your choice. Take corners wide, where possible. Don\u2019t walk into a room or round a blind corner barrel-first\u2014you don\u2019t know who might be there to grab it. Don\u2019t round a close corner muzzle-up, it\u2019s too easy for an intruder to deflect the barrel or disarm you entirely. Navigate tight corners and doorways muzzle-down, making the gun harder to grab or deflect, and you can simply drop to one knee while pivoting the barrel up and firing if it is grabbed. Remember, the carbine can also make a very effective impact weapon, but make absolutely sure anybody using it understands whatever safety mechanism it may have. Simple, fast, light, reliable and affordable, the lever action still has a place.\n\nRELATED STORY: 15 New Guns and Accessories in the \"Old West\"<\/a><\/strong>","post_title":"Lifesaving Lever-Action Rifles For Home Defense","post_excerpt":"These classic lever-action rifles deliver reliable home-defense firepower when it matters most!","post_status":"publish","comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","post_password":"","post_name":"lifesaving-lever-action-rifles-for-home-defense","to_ping":"","pinged":"\nhttps:\/\/gunsoftheoldwest.com\/2015\/04\/15-new-guns-and-accessories-in-the-old-west\/","post_modified":"2023-05-31 12:06:26","post_modified_gmt":"2023-05-31 12:06:26","post_content_filtered":"","post_parent":0,"guid":"https:\/\/www.dev.athlonoutdoors.com\/2015\/05\/28\/lifesaving-lever-action-rifles-for-home-defense\/","menu_order":0,"post_type":"post","post_mime_type":"","comment_count":"0","filter":"raw"},{"ID":109242,"post_author":"303","post_date":"2015-05-25 09:00:37","post_date_gmt":"2015-05-25 13:00:37","post_content":"\n\nThe lever-action rifle is alive and doing quite well among both domestic and foreign makers, and there\u2019s a wide field to choose from in selecting one for home-defense use. Imagine what you want it to do before you go shopping around. The centerfire models will have a fair amount of crossover in serving both the home front and the hunting camp, if that\u2019s important to you, and you can obviously stretch your money farther by extending the dual utility of a true rifle caliber. The so-called pistol-caliber lever guns have the advantage of less recoil and ammunition commonality with handguns that might be in the house, and in any of the magnum calibers they\u2019re still no slouch. With practical ranges out to 150 yards and more in the hands of a good shooter, they can also easily handle both defense and hunting chores within their practical limitations. See the gallery above to learn about six manufacturers selling lever-action rifles.\n\n \n\nFor More Information<\/strong>\n\nWinchester\nhttp:\/\/www.winchesterguns.com<\/a>\n\nMarlin Firearms\nhttp:\/\/www.marlinfirearms.com<\/a>\n\nBrowning\nhttp:\/\/www.browning.com<\/a>\n\nHenry Repeating Arms\nhttp:\/\/www.henryrifles.com<\/a>\n\nMossberg\nhttp:\/\/www.mossberg.com<\/a>\n\nRossi USA\nhttp:\/\/www.rossiusa.com<\/a>\n\n \n\nRelated Stories<\/strong>\n\n4 New Old West Guns For 2015<\/a>\n\nNew For 2015: Browning AB3 Hunter Rifle<\/a>\n\nNew For 2015: Winchester XPR Bolt-Action Rifle<\/a>\n\nNew Sporting Rifles for 2014 | Varmint, Hunting & Long-Range Roundup<\/a>\n\nGun Review: Mossberg\u2019s Duck Commanders<\/a>","post_title":"6 Manufacturers Selling Lever-Action Rifles For Home Defense Or Hunting","post_excerpt":"There's a wide field of both domestic and foreign manufacturers offering lever-action rifles for home defense and hunting.","post_status":"publish","comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","post_password":"","post_name":"6-manufacturers-selling-lever-action-rifles-for-home-defense-or-hunting","to_ping":"","pinged":"https:\/\/www.personaldefenseworld.com\/2015\/04\/4-new-old-west-guns-for-2015\/#4-new-old-west-guns-for-2015\nhttps:\/\/www.personaldefenseworld.com\/2015\/02\/new-2015-browning-ab3-hunter-rifle\/\nhttps:\/\/www.personaldefenseworld.com\/2015\/01\/new-2015-winchester-xpr-bolt-action-rifle\/\nhttps:\/\/www.tactical-life.com\/firearms\/new-sporting-rifles-for-2014\/","post_modified":"2023-05-31 12:06:54","post_modified_gmt":"2023-05-31 12:06:54","post_content_filtered":"","post_parent":0,"guid":"https:\/\/www.dev.athlonoutdoors.com\/2015\/05\/25\/6-manufacturers-selling-lever-action-rifles-for-home-defense-or-hunting\/","menu_order":0,"post_type":"post","post_mime_type":"","comment_count":"0","filter":"raw"}],"next":false,"prev":true,"total_page":12},"paged":1,"column_class":"jeg_col_2o3","class":"jnews_block_23"};

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\n

We've covered the Henry U.S. Survival AR-7 before<\/a>. This lightweight, .22 caliber subcompact takedown rifle has been the go-to survival rifle for bush pilots and backpackers since 1959. MSRP is $290 for the black version and $350 for the camo. For even more info, please visit henryrifles.com<\/a>.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

Marlin Model Golden 39A<\/h4>\n\n\n\n
\"Takedown
Marlin\u2019s .22-caliber Model Golden 39A rifle made its first appearance in 1891. It has been a favorite lever-action option for generations of shooters. MSRP: $709. <\/figcaption><\/figure>\n\n\n\n

Marlin\u2019s .22-caliber Model Golden 39A rifle made its first appearance in 1891. It has been a favorite lever-action option for generations of shooters. MSRP comes in at $709. For even more info, please visit marlinfirearms.com<\/a>.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

Taylor\u2019s 1892 Alaskan Takedown<\/h4>\n\n\n\n
\"Takedown<\/figure>\n\n\n\n

Another rifle we've covered at length before<\/a>. Lever-action rifles are the classic takedown rifle design. Taylor\u2019s Alaskan in .44 Magnum is a modified 1892 Winchester design that is very popular with Alaskan bush pilots for backwoods shooting. Lastly, MSRP comes in at $1,366. For even more info, please visit taylorsfirearms.com<\/a>.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

H-S Precision VTD Pro-Series 2000<\/h4>\n\n\n\n
\"H-S
H-S Precision is bringing the art of the takedown rifle into the\nmodern era. The Pro-Series 2000 is a stainless steel, bolt-action takedown\nrifle with a 22- to 26-inch match-grade barrel that can be chambered in anything from .204 Ruger to .458 Lott. MSRP $5,495. <\/figcaption><\/figure>\n\n\n\n

H-S Precision is bringing the art of the takedown rifle into the modern era. The Pro-Series 2000 is a stainless steel, bolt-action takedown rifle with a 22- to 26-inch match-grade barrel that can be chambered in anything from .204 Ruger to .458 Lott. MSRP is a cool $5,495. For even more info, please visit hsprecision.com<\/a>.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

Dakota Arms Model 76 Traveler<\/h4>\n\n\n\n
\"Dakota<\/figure>\n\n\n\n

This is the Cadillac of takedown rifles. The Traveler is available in three grades\u2014 Classic, Safari and African\u2014and you can choose from a limitless array of upgrades. This rifle has a unique takedown system that offers threadless assembly and disassembly. It\u2019s available in calibers from .22-250 to .450 Dakota. Lastly is MSRP, which comes in at $8,890. For even more info, please visit dakotaarms.com<\/a>.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

Sauer 202 Take Down<\/h4>\n\n\n\n
\"Sauer
This rifle raises the bar on standard takedown rifles. It has a solid action with a receiver that can accommodate all calibers from 6.5x55mm up to the massive .458 Lott. Numerous options and calibers are available, including beautifully figured stocks of grade 4 Turkish walnut. MSRP: 6,333 to $10,607. <\/figcaption><\/figure>\n\n\n\n

This rifle raises the bar on standard takedown rifles. It has a solid action with a receiver that can accommodate all calibers from 6.5x55mm up to the massive .458 Lott. Numerous options and calibers are available, including beautifully figured stocks of grade 4 Turkish walnut. MSRP can get up there, ranging from $6,333 to $10,607. For even more info, please visit sauer.de\/en<\/a>.<\/p>\n","post_title":"6 High-Quality Takedown Rifles for Easy Transport","post_excerpt":"","post_status":"publish","comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","post_password":"","post_name":"best-takedown-rifles","to_ping":"","pinged":"","post_modified":"2023-10-31 22:40:55","post_modified_gmt":"2023-11-01 02:40:55","post_content_filtered":"","post_parent":0,"guid":"https:\/\/www.dev.athlonoutdoors.com\/2015\/08\/26\/best-takedown-rifles\/","menu_order":0,"post_type":"post","post_mime_type":"","comment_count":"0","filter":"raw"},{"ID":109186,"post_author":"303","post_date":"2015-05-28 09:45:25","post_date_gmt":"2015-05-28 13:45:25","post_content":"\n\nOne of the greatest fallacies for those looking to upgrade or augment their home defense arsenal with a new long gun is the idea that you can\u2019t possibly defend your hearth and homestead without military-grade hardware, sophisticated optics and a 200-round drum magazine. Statistics, and reality, argue against that concept in terms of absolute requirements for repelling borders and defending castle walls. Do you typically need to blow off 200 rounds in a single in-home encounter or shoot the wings off a gnat at 300 yards? Nope. Do you really need to be lugging a 12-pound defensive package around the house? No again. So, what do you need?\n\nFirst off, as with any tool, look at the job the tool needs to do. Forget hordes of angry villagers with torches at the gates, or even herds of innocent zombies just out for a midnight snack. The statistical norm for a home \u201cattack\u201d is one or two people attempting to break in for one of three reasons: intoxication, anger or theft. These run anywhere from the drunk mistaking your home for somebody else\u2019s, the ex-boyfriend out for revenge, the classic (and random) middle-of-the-night burglar and the organized home invasion. With the exception of the more \u201ctargeted\u201d home invasion, most threats to the occupants are not particularly well thought out, not highly organized and not normally carried out by more than one or two hostiles. Most are close up, do not involve either extended timeframes or extended distances and do not burn up truckloads of ammunition.\n\nAn apartment dweller would rarely be shooting 300 yards in defense of wife and child, and the family living in a quiet suburban cul-de-sac is unlikely to need to shoot beyond the boundaries of either front yard or back fence. Obviously, the remote ranch house an hour from the nearest 911 response is a different matter, but for the majority of us, the home-defense rifle simply doesn\u2019t have to be a heavy, high-capacity, credit-card buster.\n\n\"lever-action, A tall gold bead like this Marbles Carbine Blade comes standard on some lever guns and can be ordered from Brownells.[\/caption]\n\nGiven all that, why do we even want a rifle in the first place? There are several reasons\u2014a rifle tends to be more powerful than a handgun (even when firing handgun ammunition because of velocity gains through longer barrels), it\u2019s frequently easier for many to shoot well at varying distances than a handgun, it extends the practical range over a handgun, it can be more intimidating to an intruder than the average handgun, and the right rifle can be relatively quick for even a non-gunnie to learn and operate effectively.\n\nRELATED STORY: 6 Manufacturers Selling Lever-Action Rifles For Home Defense Or Hunting<\/a><\/strong>\n\nIn choosing your rifle priority one is reliability. It has to function, should be simple to operate and should not be subject to ammo sensitivity against a wide range of brands and bullet types. Priority two is power, which should be in a \u201cserious\u201d caliber, such as .38 Special on up. And priority three, believe it or not, brings accuracy in last. It\u2019s nice to be able to hit a marauding gnat at 300 yards, but in most cases if your home-defense rifle can hold inside 4 inches at 100 yards, it\u2019ll be good enough.\n\nAll of this leads up, as you\u2019ve noticed, to the humble lever-action rifle as a candidate for your home-defense arsenal.\n\nThere\u2019s nothing wrong with the idea of a lever action, however archaic you perceive it to be. The repeating lever action rifle in many calibers, several models and multiple configurations was one of the original home-defense tools for much of the Western half of the U.S. for well over half a century, where it was just as effective in that role as it was in the hands of generations of hunters who brought home food for the table using it.\n\n\"lever-action, One of the advantages of a lever action is that you can tell at a glance if it\u2019s cocked or not.[\/caption]\n\nThe design is simple to learn: Fill it up through the loading gate, work the lever to chamber a round, cock the hammer, pull the trigger to fire, repeat as necessary. No separate magazines to lose or have fail to seat completely, no complicated controls to remember, no scope to knock loose, fog, or blur out at inside-the-house distances, no dead batteries, and less chance of \u201cspray-and-pray\u201d shooting as opposed to the average semi-auto like an AK-47 or AR-15.\n\nMagazine capacity, of course, is much less, but six to 10 rounds in a lever gun should easily handle 95 percent of the home-defense scenarios most of us are likely to encounter.\n\nWhich one should you choose? Look in your gun safe. You may already have what you need, whether it\u2019s Grandpa\u2019s old hand-me-down Winchester<\/a> in .30-30, a modern Browning BLR<\/a> in .308 Winchester, or even your Cowboy Action Shooting competition Marlin<\/a> or Uberti<\/a>. If not, evaluate your layout and decide whether you want the additional power and range for both indoor and outdoor applications of a centerfire rifle cartridge like the .30-30 or .308, or if a handgun caliber that\u2019ll be softer on the eardrums indoors while still easily carrying 50 or 75 yards outdoors would be a better choice.\n\nFor some, the utility of stockpiling one load for rifle and handgun, like the .357 Mag or .45 Colt, is a further consideration. For others, the ability of family members to tolerate recoil is a factor, and while I do recommend something heavier, in such cases the rimfires in .22 LR, .22 Mag and the hotter .17 calibers may be a better choice with no disconcerting recoil or extreme muzzle blast. My wife has two much-beloved Marlin 1894s<\/a> in .32-20 from her cowboy competition days. She knows them intimately, she shoots them better than anything else in the vault, and in her case, she\u2019d be far better off with her Marlins than with any of my tricked-out AR-15s if it came to somebody kicking our front door in.\n\nClose Quarters<\/strong>\n\n\"lever-action, \u201cShorter barrels can shoot every bit as accurately as longer barrels, and they maneuver infinitely better through tight confines\u2026 \u201d[\/caption]\n\nIndoor practicality dictates a short barrel. Shorter barrels can shoot every bit as accurately as longer barrels, and they maneuver infinitely better through tight confines and angles if you have to. The general recommendation in case of loud noises in the middle of the night is to congregate with a phone in one defensible location in the home while waiting for the sirens, but sometimes you have to do what you have to do, and a short, light, handy lever-action carbine just navigates easier all the way round than a longer barrel does. I do own Grandpa\u2019s old Winchester Model 94<\/a> in .30-30, and its 20-inch barrel is the longest I\u2019d go on a home-defense carbine by choice. I also have a 24-inch Marlin 1894 in .45 Colt that I could tolerate reasonably well, if it was all I had. Keep in mind that octagonal barrels will be heavier than round, and the shorter you go the less magazine capacity. There\u2019s no absolute, so buy what works best for you, or use what you already have if money\u2019s tight.\n\nRELATED STORY: Uberti\u2019s Silverboy Lever-Action Rifle in .22 LR<\/a><\/strong>\n\nLever action sights may not be outstanding, but they are typically usable as they come. The standard blade front\/notch rear is perfectly adequate for most shooters with decent eyesight out to 75 yards and farther, if necessary. Most can be easily adjusted out to 100 yards and used without expensive aftermarket products. If you do want refinements, an aperture rear can help with distances and a white-outline front blade, or a gold bead, can help line things up in darker lighting. Various methods of mounting scopes exist, with Marlins and Brownings being the easiest as they come pre-drilled and tapped for an optic. Indoors, a scope works against you and outdoors it can work for you, but it tends to slow down target acquisition. A good set of iron sights can put you right on target, right now, and that\u2019s important in close-up encounters.\n\nMost classic lever guns use under-barrel tube magazines, from the traditional side-loading Winchester to the \u201crimfire style\u201d on many .22 lever actions and on the Henry<\/a> rimfires and centerfires, where rounds are loaded through a port in the forward section of the magazine tube itself. The Browning BLR uses a detachable box magazine. In the most common home-defense context, there\u2019s no real advantage to any of these types since you\u2019re not looking at speed reloads anyway.\n\nIn the heavier calibers, consider a good recoil pad, if the new carbine doesn\u2019t already have one. The .30-30 is a fairly mild round for a rifle, but its stock design can punch a shoulder smartly with a solid steel or composite buttplate. Same with the .44 Mag caliber. You\u2019ll get more cooperation in learning and practice from family members if you reduce the \u201couch\u201d factor going in.\n\nThreat Takedown<\/strong>\n\n\"lever-action-rifles-7\"\n\nLearn how to work your home with your new lever gun once you make your choice. Take corners wide, where possible. Don\u2019t walk into a room or round a blind corner barrel-first\u2014you don\u2019t know who might be there to grab it. Don\u2019t round a close corner muzzle-up, it\u2019s too easy for an intruder to deflect the barrel or disarm you entirely. Navigate tight corners and doorways muzzle-down, making the gun harder to grab or deflect, and you can simply drop to one knee while pivoting the barrel up and firing if it is grabbed. Remember, the carbine can also make a very effective impact weapon, but make absolutely sure anybody using it understands whatever safety mechanism it may have. Simple, fast, light, reliable and affordable, the lever action still has a place.\n\nRELATED STORY: 15 New Guns and Accessories in the \"Old West\"<\/a><\/strong>","post_title":"Lifesaving Lever-Action Rifles For Home Defense","post_excerpt":"These classic lever-action rifles deliver reliable home-defense firepower when it matters most!","post_status":"publish","comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","post_password":"","post_name":"lifesaving-lever-action-rifles-for-home-defense","to_ping":"","pinged":"\nhttps:\/\/gunsoftheoldwest.com\/2015\/04\/15-new-guns-and-accessories-in-the-old-west\/","post_modified":"2023-05-31 12:06:26","post_modified_gmt":"2023-05-31 12:06:26","post_content_filtered":"","post_parent":0,"guid":"https:\/\/www.dev.athlonoutdoors.com\/2015\/05\/28\/lifesaving-lever-action-rifles-for-home-defense\/","menu_order":0,"post_type":"post","post_mime_type":"","comment_count":"0","filter":"raw"},{"ID":109242,"post_author":"303","post_date":"2015-05-25 09:00:37","post_date_gmt":"2015-05-25 13:00:37","post_content":"\n\nThe lever-action rifle is alive and doing quite well among both domestic and foreign makers, and there\u2019s a wide field to choose from in selecting one for home-defense use. Imagine what you want it to do before you go shopping around. The centerfire models will have a fair amount of crossover in serving both the home front and the hunting camp, if that\u2019s important to you, and you can obviously stretch your money farther by extending the dual utility of a true rifle caliber. The so-called pistol-caliber lever guns have the advantage of less recoil and ammunition commonality with handguns that might be in the house, and in any of the magnum calibers they\u2019re still no slouch. With practical ranges out to 150 yards and more in the hands of a good shooter, they can also easily handle both defense and hunting chores within their practical limitations. See the gallery above to learn about six manufacturers selling lever-action rifles.\n\n \n\nFor More Information<\/strong>\n\nWinchester\nhttp:\/\/www.winchesterguns.com<\/a>\n\nMarlin Firearms\nhttp:\/\/www.marlinfirearms.com<\/a>\n\nBrowning\nhttp:\/\/www.browning.com<\/a>\n\nHenry Repeating Arms\nhttp:\/\/www.henryrifles.com<\/a>\n\nMossberg\nhttp:\/\/www.mossberg.com<\/a>\n\nRossi USA\nhttp:\/\/www.rossiusa.com<\/a>\n\n \n\nRelated Stories<\/strong>\n\n4 New Old West Guns For 2015<\/a>\n\nNew For 2015: Browning AB3 Hunter Rifle<\/a>\n\nNew For 2015: Winchester XPR Bolt-Action Rifle<\/a>\n\nNew Sporting Rifles for 2014 | Varmint, Hunting & Long-Range Roundup<\/a>\n\nGun Review: Mossberg\u2019s Duck Commanders<\/a>","post_title":"6 Manufacturers Selling Lever-Action Rifles For Home Defense Or Hunting","post_excerpt":"There's a wide field of both domestic and foreign manufacturers offering lever-action rifles for home defense and hunting.","post_status":"publish","comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","post_password":"","post_name":"6-manufacturers-selling-lever-action-rifles-for-home-defense-or-hunting","to_ping":"","pinged":"https:\/\/www.personaldefenseworld.com\/2015\/04\/4-new-old-west-guns-for-2015\/#4-new-old-west-guns-for-2015\nhttps:\/\/www.personaldefenseworld.com\/2015\/02\/new-2015-browning-ab3-hunter-rifle\/\nhttps:\/\/www.personaldefenseworld.com\/2015\/01\/new-2015-winchester-xpr-bolt-action-rifle\/\nhttps:\/\/www.tactical-life.com\/firearms\/new-sporting-rifles-for-2014\/","post_modified":"2023-05-31 12:06:54","post_modified_gmt":"2023-05-31 12:06:54","post_content_filtered":"","post_parent":0,"guid":"https:\/\/www.dev.athlonoutdoors.com\/2015\/05\/25\/6-manufacturers-selling-lever-action-rifles-for-home-defense-or-hunting\/","menu_order":0,"post_type":"post","post_mime_type":"","comment_count":"0","filter":"raw"}],"next":false,"prev":true,"total_page":12},"paged":1,"column_class":"jeg_col_2o3","class":"jnews_block_23"};

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BROWSE BY BRAND

\n
\"Takedown<\/figure>\n\n\n\n

We've covered the Henry U.S. Survival AR-7 before<\/a>. This lightweight, .22 caliber subcompact takedown rifle has been the go-to survival rifle for bush pilots and backpackers since 1959. MSRP is $290 for the black version and $350 for the camo. For even more info, please visit henryrifles.com<\/a>.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

Marlin Model Golden 39A<\/h4>\n\n\n\n
\"Takedown
Marlin\u2019s .22-caliber Model Golden 39A rifle made its first appearance in 1891. It has been a favorite lever-action option for generations of shooters. MSRP: $709. <\/figcaption><\/figure>\n\n\n\n

Marlin\u2019s .22-caliber Model Golden 39A rifle made its first appearance in 1891. It has been a favorite lever-action option for generations of shooters. MSRP comes in at $709. For even more info, please visit marlinfirearms.com<\/a>.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

Taylor\u2019s 1892 Alaskan Takedown<\/h4>\n\n\n\n
\"Takedown<\/figure>\n\n\n\n

Another rifle we've covered at length before<\/a>. Lever-action rifles are the classic takedown rifle design. Taylor\u2019s Alaskan in .44 Magnum is a modified 1892 Winchester design that is very popular with Alaskan bush pilots for backwoods shooting. Lastly, MSRP comes in at $1,366. For even more info, please visit taylorsfirearms.com<\/a>.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

H-S Precision VTD Pro-Series 2000<\/h4>\n\n\n\n
\"H-S
H-S Precision is bringing the art of the takedown rifle into the\nmodern era. The Pro-Series 2000 is a stainless steel, bolt-action takedown\nrifle with a 22- to 26-inch match-grade barrel that can be chambered in anything from .204 Ruger to .458 Lott. MSRP $5,495. <\/figcaption><\/figure>\n\n\n\n

H-S Precision is bringing the art of the takedown rifle into the modern era. The Pro-Series 2000 is a stainless steel, bolt-action takedown rifle with a 22- to 26-inch match-grade barrel that can be chambered in anything from .204 Ruger to .458 Lott. MSRP is a cool $5,495. For even more info, please visit hsprecision.com<\/a>.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

Dakota Arms Model 76 Traveler<\/h4>\n\n\n\n
\"Dakota<\/figure>\n\n\n\n

This is the Cadillac of takedown rifles. The Traveler is available in three grades\u2014 Classic, Safari and African\u2014and you can choose from a limitless array of upgrades. This rifle has a unique takedown system that offers threadless assembly and disassembly. It\u2019s available in calibers from .22-250 to .450 Dakota. Lastly is MSRP, which comes in at $8,890. For even more info, please visit dakotaarms.com<\/a>.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

Sauer 202 Take Down<\/h4>\n\n\n\n
\"Sauer
This rifle raises the bar on standard takedown rifles. It has a solid action with a receiver that can accommodate all calibers from 6.5x55mm up to the massive .458 Lott. Numerous options and calibers are available, including beautifully figured stocks of grade 4 Turkish walnut. MSRP: 6,333 to $10,607. <\/figcaption><\/figure>\n\n\n\n

This rifle raises the bar on standard takedown rifles. It has a solid action with a receiver that can accommodate all calibers from 6.5x55mm up to the massive .458 Lott. Numerous options and calibers are available, including beautifully figured stocks of grade 4 Turkish walnut. MSRP can get up there, ranging from $6,333 to $10,607. For even more info, please visit sauer.de\/en<\/a>.<\/p>\n","post_title":"6 High-Quality Takedown Rifles for Easy Transport","post_excerpt":"","post_status":"publish","comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","post_password":"","post_name":"best-takedown-rifles","to_ping":"","pinged":"","post_modified":"2023-10-31 22:40:55","post_modified_gmt":"2023-11-01 02:40:55","post_content_filtered":"","post_parent":0,"guid":"https:\/\/www.dev.athlonoutdoors.com\/2015\/08\/26\/best-takedown-rifles\/","menu_order":0,"post_type":"post","post_mime_type":"","comment_count":"0","filter":"raw"},{"ID":109186,"post_author":"303","post_date":"2015-05-28 09:45:25","post_date_gmt":"2015-05-28 13:45:25","post_content":"\n\nOne of the greatest fallacies for those looking to upgrade or augment their home defense arsenal with a new long gun is the idea that you can\u2019t possibly defend your hearth and homestead without military-grade hardware, sophisticated optics and a 200-round drum magazine. Statistics, and reality, argue against that concept in terms of absolute requirements for repelling borders and defending castle walls. Do you typically need to blow off 200 rounds in a single in-home encounter or shoot the wings off a gnat at 300 yards? Nope. Do you really need to be lugging a 12-pound defensive package around the house? No again. So, what do you need?\n\nFirst off, as with any tool, look at the job the tool needs to do. Forget hordes of angry villagers with torches at the gates, or even herds of innocent zombies just out for a midnight snack. The statistical norm for a home \u201cattack\u201d is one or two people attempting to break in for one of three reasons: intoxication, anger or theft. These run anywhere from the drunk mistaking your home for somebody else\u2019s, the ex-boyfriend out for revenge, the classic (and random) middle-of-the-night burglar and the organized home invasion. With the exception of the more \u201ctargeted\u201d home invasion, most threats to the occupants are not particularly well thought out, not highly organized and not normally carried out by more than one or two hostiles. Most are close up, do not involve either extended timeframes or extended distances and do not burn up truckloads of ammunition.\n\nAn apartment dweller would rarely be shooting 300 yards in defense of wife and child, and the family living in a quiet suburban cul-de-sac is unlikely to need to shoot beyond the boundaries of either front yard or back fence. Obviously, the remote ranch house an hour from the nearest 911 response is a different matter, but for the majority of us, the home-defense rifle simply doesn\u2019t have to be a heavy, high-capacity, credit-card buster.\n\n\"lever-action, A tall gold bead like this Marbles Carbine Blade comes standard on some lever guns and can be ordered from Brownells.[\/caption]\n\nGiven all that, why do we even want a rifle in the first place? There are several reasons\u2014a rifle tends to be more powerful than a handgun (even when firing handgun ammunition because of velocity gains through longer barrels), it\u2019s frequently easier for many to shoot well at varying distances than a handgun, it extends the practical range over a handgun, it can be more intimidating to an intruder than the average handgun, and the right rifle can be relatively quick for even a non-gunnie to learn and operate effectively.\n\nRELATED STORY: 6 Manufacturers Selling Lever-Action Rifles For Home Defense Or Hunting<\/a><\/strong>\n\nIn choosing your rifle priority one is reliability. It has to function, should be simple to operate and should not be subject to ammo sensitivity against a wide range of brands and bullet types. Priority two is power, which should be in a \u201cserious\u201d caliber, such as .38 Special on up. And priority three, believe it or not, brings accuracy in last. It\u2019s nice to be able to hit a marauding gnat at 300 yards, but in most cases if your home-defense rifle can hold inside 4 inches at 100 yards, it\u2019ll be good enough.\n\nAll of this leads up, as you\u2019ve noticed, to the humble lever-action rifle as a candidate for your home-defense arsenal.\n\nThere\u2019s nothing wrong with the idea of a lever action, however archaic you perceive it to be. The repeating lever action rifle in many calibers, several models and multiple configurations was one of the original home-defense tools for much of the Western half of the U.S. for well over half a century, where it was just as effective in that role as it was in the hands of generations of hunters who brought home food for the table using it.\n\n\"lever-action, One of the advantages of a lever action is that you can tell at a glance if it\u2019s cocked or not.[\/caption]\n\nThe design is simple to learn: Fill it up through the loading gate, work the lever to chamber a round, cock the hammer, pull the trigger to fire, repeat as necessary. No separate magazines to lose or have fail to seat completely, no complicated controls to remember, no scope to knock loose, fog, or blur out at inside-the-house distances, no dead batteries, and less chance of \u201cspray-and-pray\u201d shooting as opposed to the average semi-auto like an AK-47 or AR-15.\n\nMagazine capacity, of course, is much less, but six to 10 rounds in a lever gun should easily handle 95 percent of the home-defense scenarios most of us are likely to encounter.\n\nWhich one should you choose? Look in your gun safe. You may already have what you need, whether it\u2019s Grandpa\u2019s old hand-me-down Winchester<\/a> in .30-30, a modern Browning BLR<\/a> in .308 Winchester, or even your Cowboy Action Shooting competition Marlin<\/a> or Uberti<\/a>. If not, evaluate your layout and decide whether you want the additional power and range for both indoor and outdoor applications of a centerfire rifle cartridge like the .30-30 or .308, or if a handgun caliber that\u2019ll be softer on the eardrums indoors while still easily carrying 50 or 75 yards outdoors would be a better choice.\n\nFor some, the utility of stockpiling one load for rifle and handgun, like the .357 Mag or .45 Colt, is a further consideration. For others, the ability of family members to tolerate recoil is a factor, and while I do recommend something heavier, in such cases the rimfires in .22 LR, .22 Mag and the hotter .17 calibers may be a better choice with no disconcerting recoil or extreme muzzle blast. My wife has two much-beloved Marlin 1894s<\/a> in .32-20 from her cowboy competition days. She knows them intimately, she shoots them better than anything else in the vault, and in her case, she\u2019d be far better off with her Marlins than with any of my tricked-out AR-15s if it came to somebody kicking our front door in.\n\nClose Quarters<\/strong>\n\n\"lever-action, \u201cShorter barrels can shoot every bit as accurately as longer barrels, and they maneuver infinitely better through tight confines\u2026 \u201d[\/caption]\n\nIndoor practicality dictates a short barrel. Shorter barrels can shoot every bit as accurately as longer barrels, and they maneuver infinitely better through tight confines and angles if you have to. The general recommendation in case of loud noises in the middle of the night is to congregate with a phone in one defensible location in the home while waiting for the sirens, but sometimes you have to do what you have to do, and a short, light, handy lever-action carbine just navigates easier all the way round than a longer barrel does. I do own Grandpa\u2019s old Winchester Model 94<\/a> in .30-30, and its 20-inch barrel is the longest I\u2019d go on a home-defense carbine by choice. I also have a 24-inch Marlin 1894 in .45 Colt that I could tolerate reasonably well, if it was all I had. Keep in mind that octagonal barrels will be heavier than round, and the shorter you go the less magazine capacity. There\u2019s no absolute, so buy what works best for you, or use what you already have if money\u2019s tight.\n\nRELATED STORY: Uberti\u2019s Silverboy Lever-Action Rifle in .22 LR<\/a><\/strong>\n\nLever action sights may not be outstanding, but they are typically usable as they come. The standard blade front\/notch rear is perfectly adequate for most shooters with decent eyesight out to 75 yards and farther, if necessary. Most can be easily adjusted out to 100 yards and used without expensive aftermarket products. If you do want refinements, an aperture rear can help with distances and a white-outline front blade, or a gold bead, can help line things up in darker lighting. Various methods of mounting scopes exist, with Marlins and Brownings being the easiest as they come pre-drilled and tapped for an optic. Indoors, a scope works against you and outdoors it can work for you, but it tends to slow down target acquisition. A good set of iron sights can put you right on target, right now, and that\u2019s important in close-up encounters.\n\nMost classic lever guns use under-barrel tube magazines, from the traditional side-loading Winchester to the \u201crimfire style\u201d on many .22 lever actions and on the Henry<\/a> rimfires and centerfires, where rounds are loaded through a port in the forward section of the magazine tube itself. The Browning BLR uses a detachable box magazine. In the most common home-defense context, there\u2019s no real advantage to any of these types since you\u2019re not looking at speed reloads anyway.\n\nIn the heavier calibers, consider a good recoil pad, if the new carbine doesn\u2019t already have one. The .30-30 is a fairly mild round for a rifle, but its stock design can punch a shoulder smartly with a solid steel or composite buttplate. Same with the .44 Mag caliber. You\u2019ll get more cooperation in learning and practice from family members if you reduce the \u201couch\u201d factor going in.\n\nThreat Takedown<\/strong>\n\n\"lever-action-rifles-7\"\n\nLearn how to work your home with your new lever gun once you make your choice. Take corners wide, where possible. Don\u2019t walk into a room or round a blind corner barrel-first\u2014you don\u2019t know who might be there to grab it. Don\u2019t round a close corner muzzle-up, it\u2019s too easy for an intruder to deflect the barrel or disarm you entirely. Navigate tight corners and doorways muzzle-down, making the gun harder to grab or deflect, and you can simply drop to one knee while pivoting the barrel up and firing if it is grabbed. Remember, the carbine can also make a very effective impact weapon, but make absolutely sure anybody using it understands whatever safety mechanism it may have. Simple, fast, light, reliable and affordable, the lever action still has a place.\n\nRELATED STORY: 15 New Guns and Accessories in the \"Old West\"<\/a><\/strong>","post_title":"Lifesaving Lever-Action Rifles For Home Defense","post_excerpt":"These classic lever-action rifles deliver reliable home-defense firepower when it matters most!","post_status":"publish","comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","post_password":"","post_name":"lifesaving-lever-action-rifles-for-home-defense","to_ping":"","pinged":"\nhttps:\/\/gunsoftheoldwest.com\/2015\/04\/15-new-guns-and-accessories-in-the-old-west\/","post_modified":"2023-05-31 12:06:26","post_modified_gmt":"2023-05-31 12:06:26","post_content_filtered":"","post_parent":0,"guid":"https:\/\/www.dev.athlonoutdoors.com\/2015\/05\/28\/lifesaving-lever-action-rifles-for-home-defense\/","menu_order":0,"post_type":"post","post_mime_type":"","comment_count":"0","filter":"raw"},{"ID":109242,"post_author":"303","post_date":"2015-05-25 09:00:37","post_date_gmt":"2015-05-25 13:00:37","post_content":"\n\nThe lever-action rifle is alive and doing quite well among both domestic and foreign makers, and there\u2019s a wide field to choose from in selecting one for home-defense use. Imagine what you want it to do before you go shopping around. The centerfire models will have a fair amount of crossover in serving both the home front and the hunting camp, if that\u2019s important to you, and you can obviously stretch your money farther by extending the dual utility of a true rifle caliber. The so-called pistol-caliber lever guns have the advantage of less recoil and ammunition commonality with handguns that might be in the house, and in any of the magnum calibers they\u2019re still no slouch. With practical ranges out to 150 yards and more in the hands of a good shooter, they can also easily handle both defense and hunting chores within their practical limitations. See the gallery above to learn about six manufacturers selling lever-action rifles.\n\n \n\nFor More Information<\/strong>\n\nWinchester\nhttp:\/\/www.winchesterguns.com<\/a>\n\nMarlin Firearms\nhttp:\/\/www.marlinfirearms.com<\/a>\n\nBrowning\nhttp:\/\/www.browning.com<\/a>\n\nHenry Repeating Arms\nhttp:\/\/www.henryrifles.com<\/a>\n\nMossberg\nhttp:\/\/www.mossberg.com<\/a>\n\nRossi USA\nhttp:\/\/www.rossiusa.com<\/a>\n\n \n\nRelated Stories<\/strong>\n\n4 New Old West Guns For 2015<\/a>\n\nNew For 2015: Browning AB3 Hunter Rifle<\/a>\n\nNew For 2015: Winchester XPR Bolt-Action Rifle<\/a>\n\nNew Sporting Rifles for 2014 | Varmint, Hunting & Long-Range Roundup<\/a>\n\nGun Review: Mossberg\u2019s Duck Commanders<\/a>","post_title":"6 Manufacturers Selling Lever-Action Rifles For Home Defense Or Hunting","post_excerpt":"There's a wide field of both domestic and foreign manufacturers offering lever-action rifles for home defense and hunting.","post_status":"publish","comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","post_password":"","post_name":"6-manufacturers-selling-lever-action-rifles-for-home-defense-or-hunting","to_ping":"","pinged":"https:\/\/www.personaldefenseworld.com\/2015\/04\/4-new-old-west-guns-for-2015\/#4-new-old-west-guns-for-2015\nhttps:\/\/www.personaldefenseworld.com\/2015\/02\/new-2015-browning-ab3-hunter-rifle\/\nhttps:\/\/www.personaldefenseworld.com\/2015\/01\/new-2015-winchester-xpr-bolt-action-rifle\/\nhttps:\/\/www.tactical-life.com\/firearms\/new-sporting-rifles-for-2014\/","post_modified":"2023-05-31 12:06:54","post_modified_gmt":"2023-05-31 12:06:54","post_content_filtered":"","post_parent":0,"guid":"https:\/\/www.dev.athlonoutdoors.com\/2015\/05\/25\/6-manufacturers-selling-lever-action-rifles-for-home-defense-or-hunting\/","menu_order":0,"post_type":"post","post_mime_type":"","comment_count":"0","filter":"raw"}],"next":false,"prev":true,"total_page":12},"paged":1,"column_class":"jeg_col_2o3","class":"jnews_block_23"};

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Henry U.S. Survival AR-7<\/h4>\n\n\n\n
\"Takedown<\/figure>\n\n\n\n

We've covered the Henry U.S. Survival AR-7 before<\/a>. This lightweight, .22 caliber subcompact takedown rifle has been the go-to survival rifle for bush pilots and backpackers since 1959. MSRP is $290 for the black version and $350 for the camo. For even more info, please visit henryrifles.com<\/a>.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

Marlin Model Golden 39A<\/h4>\n\n\n\n
\"Takedown
Marlin\u2019s .22-caliber Model Golden 39A rifle made its first appearance in 1891. It has been a favorite lever-action option for generations of shooters. MSRP: $709. <\/figcaption><\/figure>\n\n\n\n

Marlin\u2019s .22-caliber Model Golden 39A rifle made its first appearance in 1891. It has been a favorite lever-action option for generations of shooters. MSRP comes in at $709. For even more info, please visit marlinfirearms.com<\/a>.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

Taylor\u2019s 1892 Alaskan Takedown<\/h4>\n\n\n\n
\"Takedown<\/figure>\n\n\n\n

Another rifle we've covered at length before<\/a>. Lever-action rifles are the classic takedown rifle design. Taylor\u2019s Alaskan in .44 Magnum is a modified 1892 Winchester design that is very popular with Alaskan bush pilots for backwoods shooting. Lastly, MSRP comes in at $1,366. For even more info, please visit taylorsfirearms.com<\/a>.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

H-S Precision VTD Pro-Series 2000<\/h4>\n\n\n\n
\"H-S
H-S Precision is bringing the art of the takedown rifle into the\nmodern era. The Pro-Series 2000 is a stainless steel, bolt-action takedown\nrifle with a 22- to 26-inch match-grade barrel that can be chambered in anything from .204 Ruger to .458 Lott. MSRP $5,495. <\/figcaption><\/figure>\n\n\n\n

H-S Precision is bringing the art of the takedown rifle into the modern era. The Pro-Series 2000 is a stainless steel, bolt-action takedown rifle with a 22- to 26-inch match-grade barrel that can be chambered in anything from .204 Ruger to .458 Lott. MSRP is a cool $5,495. For even more info, please visit hsprecision.com<\/a>.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

Dakota Arms Model 76 Traveler<\/h4>\n\n\n\n
\"Dakota<\/figure>\n\n\n\n

This is the Cadillac of takedown rifles. The Traveler is available in three grades\u2014 Classic, Safari and African\u2014and you can choose from a limitless array of upgrades. This rifle has a unique takedown system that offers threadless assembly and disassembly. It\u2019s available in calibers from .22-250 to .450 Dakota. Lastly is MSRP, which comes in at $8,890. For even more info, please visit dakotaarms.com<\/a>.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

Sauer 202 Take Down<\/h4>\n\n\n\n
\"Sauer
This rifle raises the bar on standard takedown rifles. It has a solid action with a receiver that can accommodate all calibers from 6.5x55mm up to the massive .458 Lott. Numerous options and calibers are available, including beautifully figured stocks of grade 4 Turkish walnut. MSRP: 6,333 to $10,607. <\/figcaption><\/figure>\n\n\n\n

This rifle raises the bar on standard takedown rifles. It has a solid action with a receiver that can accommodate all calibers from 6.5x55mm up to the massive .458 Lott. Numerous options and calibers are available, including beautifully figured stocks of grade 4 Turkish walnut. MSRP can get up there, ranging from $6,333 to $10,607. For even more info, please visit sauer.de\/en<\/a>.<\/p>\n","post_title":"6 High-Quality Takedown Rifles for Easy Transport","post_excerpt":"","post_status":"publish","comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","post_password":"","post_name":"best-takedown-rifles","to_ping":"","pinged":"","post_modified":"2023-10-31 22:40:55","post_modified_gmt":"2023-11-01 02:40:55","post_content_filtered":"","post_parent":0,"guid":"https:\/\/www.dev.athlonoutdoors.com\/2015\/08\/26\/best-takedown-rifles\/","menu_order":0,"post_type":"post","post_mime_type":"","comment_count":"0","filter":"raw"},{"ID":109186,"post_author":"303","post_date":"2015-05-28 09:45:25","post_date_gmt":"2015-05-28 13:45:25","post_content":"\n\nOne of the greatest fallacies for those looking to upgrade or augment their home defense arsenal with a new long gun is the idea that you can\u2019t possibly defend your hearth and homestead without military-grade hardware, sophisticated optics and a 200-round drum magazine. Statistics, and reality, argue against that concept in terms of absolute requirements for repelling borders and defending castle walls. Do you typically need to blow off 200 rounds in a single in-home encounter or shoot the wings off a gnat at 300 yards? Nope. Do you really need to be lugging a 12-pound defensive package around the house? No again. So, what do you need?\n\nFirst off, as with any tool, look at the job the tool needs to do. Forget hordes of angry villagers with torches at the gates, or even herds of innocent zombies just out for a midnight snack. The statistical norm for a home \u201cattack\u201d is one or two people attempting to break in for one of three reasons: intoxication, anger or theft. These run anywhere from the drunk mistaking your home for somebody else\u2019s, the ex-boyfriend out for revenge, the classic (and random) middle-of-the-night burglar and the organized home invasion. With the exception of the more \u201ctargeted\u201d home invasion, most threats to the occupants are not particularly well thought out, not highly organized and not normally carried out by more than one or two hostiles. Most are close up, do not involve either extended timeframes or extended distances and do not burn up truckloads of ammunition.\n\nAn apartment dweller would rarely be shooting 300 yards in defense of wife and child, and the family living in a quiet suburban cul-de-sac is unlikely to need to shoot beyond the boundaries of either front yard or back fence. Obviously, the remote ranch house an hour from the nearest 911 response is a different matter, but for the majority of us, the home-defense rifle simply doesn\u2019t have to be a heavy, high-capacity, credit-card buster.\n\n\"lever-action, A tall gold bead like this Marbles Carbine Blade comes standard on some lever guns and can be ordered from Brownells.[\/caption]\n\nGiven all that, why do we even want a rifle in the first place? There are several reasons\u2014a rifle tends to be more powerful than a handgun (even when firing handgun ammunition because of velocity gains through longer barrels), it\u2019s frequently easier for many to shoot well at varying distances than a handgun, it extends the practical range over a handgun, it can be more intimidating to an intruder than the average handgun, and the right rifle can be relatively quick for even a non-gunnie to learn and operate effectively.\n\nRELATED STORY: 6 Manufacturers Selling Lever-Action Rifles For Home Defense Or Hunting<\/a><\/strong>\n\nIn choosing your rifle priority one is reliability. It has to function, should be simple to operate and should not be subject to ammo sensitivity against a wide range of brands and bullet types. Priority two is power, which should be in a \u201cserious\u201d caliber, such as .38 Special on up. And priority three, believe it or not, brings accuracy in last. It\u2019s nice to be able to hit a marauding gnat at 300 yards, but in most cases if your home-defense rifle can hold inside 4 inches at 100 yards, it\u2019ll be good enough.\n\nAll of this leads up, as you\u2019ve noticed, to the humble lever-action rifle as a candidate for your home-defense arsenal.\n\nThere\u2019s nothing wrong with the idea of a lever action, however archaic you perceive it to be. The repeating lever action rifle in many calibers, several models and multiple configurations was one of the original home-defense tools for much of the Western half of the U.S. for well over half a century, where it was just as effective in that role as it was in the hands of generations of hunters who brought home food for the table using it.\n\n\"lever-action, One of the advantages of a lever action is that you can tell at a glance if it\u2019s cocked or not.[\/caption]\n\nThe design is simple to learn: Fill it up through the loading gate, work the lever to chamber a round, cock the hammer, pull the trigger to fire, repeat as necessary. No separate magazines to lose or have fail to seat completely, no complicated controls to remember, no scope to knock loose, fog, or blur out at inside-the-house distances, no dead batteries, and less chance of \u201cspray-and-pray\u201d shooting as opposed to the average semi-auto like an AK-47 or AR-15.\n\nMagazine capacity, of course, is much less, but six to 10 rounds in a lever gun should easily handle 95 percent of the home-defense scenarios most of us are likely to encounter.\n\nWhich one should you choose? Look in your gun safe. You may already have what you need, whether it\u2019s Grandpa\u2019s old hand-me-down Winchester<\/a> in .30-30, a modern Browning BLR<\/a> in .308 Winchester, or even your Cowboy Action Shooting competition Marlin<\/a> or Uberti<\/a>. If not, evaluate your layout and decide whether you want the additional power and range for both indoor and outdoor applications of a centerfire rifle cartridge like the .30-30 or .308, or if a handgun caliber that\u2019ll be softer on the eardrums indoors while still easily carrying 50 or 75 yards outdoors would be a better choice.\n\nFor some, the utility of stockpiling one load for rifle and handgun, like the .357 Mag or .45 Colt, is a further consideration. For others, the ability of family members to tolerate recoil is a factor, and while I do recommend something heavier, in such cases the rimfires in .22 LR, .22 Mag and the hotter .17 calibers may be a better choice with no disconcerting recoil or extreme muzzle blast. My wife has two much-beloved Marlin 1894s<\/a> in .32-20 from her cowboy competition days. She knows them intimately, she shoots them better than anything else in the vault, and in her case, she\u2019d be far better off with her Marlins than with any of my tricked-out AR-15s if it came to somebody kicking our front door in.\n\nClose Quarters<\/strong>\n\n\"lever-action, \u201cShorter barrels can shoot every bit as accurately as longer barrels, and they maneuver infinitely better through tight confines\u2026 \u201d[\/caption]\n\nIndoor practicality dictates a short barrel. Shorter barrels can shoot every bit as accurately as longer barrels, and they maneuver infinitely better through tight confines and angles if you have to. The general recommendation in case of loud noises in the middle of the night is to congregate with a phone in one defensible location in the home while waiting for the sirens, but sometimes you have to do what you have to do, and a short, light, handy lever-action carbine just navigates easier all the way round than a longer barrel does. I do own Grandpa\u2019s old Winchester Model 94<\/a> in .30-30, and its 20-inch barrel is the longest I\u2019d go on a home-defense carbine by choice. I also have a 24-inch Marlin 1894 in .45 Colt that I could tolerate reasonably well, if it was all I had. Keep in mind that octagonal barrels will be heavier than round, and the shorter you go the less magazine capacity. There\u2019s no absolute, so buy what works best for you, or use what you already have if money\u2019s tight.\n\nRELATED STORY: Uberti\u2019s Silverboy Lever-Action Rifle in .22 LR<\/a><\/strong>\n\nLever action sights may not be outstanding, but they are typically usable as they come. The standard blade front\/notch rear is perfectly adequate for most shooters with decent eyesight out to 75 yards and farther, if necessary. Most can be easily adjusted out to 100 yards and used without expensive aftermarket products. If you do want refinements, an aperture rear can help with distances and a white-outline front blade, or a gold bead, can help line things up in darker lighting. Various methods of mounting scopes exist, with Marlins and Brownings being the easiest as they come pre-drilled and tapped for an optic. Indoors, a scope works against you and outdoors it can work for you, but it tends to slow down target acquisition. A good set of iron sights can put you right on target, right now, and that\u2019s important in close-up encounters.\n\nMost classic lever guns use under-barrel tube magazines, from the traditional side-loading Winchester to the \u201crimfire style\u201d on many .22 lever actions and on the Henry<\/a> rimfires and centerfires, where rounds are loaded through a port in the forward section of the magazine tube itself. The Browning BLR uses a detachable box magazine. In the most common home-defense context, there\u2019s no real advantage to any of these types since you\u2019re not looking at speed reloads anyway.\n\nIn the heavier calibers, consider a good recoil pad, if the new carbine doesn\u2019t already have one. The .30-30 is a fairly mild round for a rifle, but its stock design can punch a shoulder smartly with a solid steel or composite buttplate. Same with the .44 Mag caliber. You\u2019ll get more cooperation in learning and practice from family members if you reduce the \u201couch\u201d factor going in.\n\nThreat Takedown<\/strong>\n\n\"lever-action-rifles-7\"\n\nLearn how to work your home with your new lever gun once you make your choice. Take corners wide, where possible. Don\u2019t walk into a room or round a blind corner barrel-first\u2014you don\u2019t know who might be there to grab it. Don\u2019t round a close corner muzzle-up, it\u2019s too easy for an intruder to deflect the barrel or disarm you entirely. Navigate tight corners and doorways muzzle-down, making the gun harder to grab or deflect, and you can simply drop to one knee while pivoting the barrel up and firing if it is grabbed. Remember, the carbine can also make a very effective impact weapon, but make absolutely sure anybody using it understands whatever safety mechanism it may have. Simple, fast, light, reliable and affordable, the lever action still has a place.\n\nRELATED STORY: 15 New Guns and Accessories in the \"Old West\"<\/a><\/strong>","post_title":"Lifesaving Lever-Action Rifles For Home Defense","post_excerpt":"These classic lever-action rifles deliver reliable home-defense firepower when it matters most!","post_status":"publish","comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","post_password":"","post_name":"lifesaving-lever-action-rifles-for-home-defense","to_ping":"","pinged":"\nhttps:\/\/gunsoftheoldwest.com\/2015\/04\/15-new-guns-and-accessories-in-the-old-west\/","post_modified":"2023-05-31 12:06:26","post_modified_gmt":"2023-05-31 12:06:26","post_content_filtered":"","post_parent":0,"guid":"https:\/\/www.dev.athlonoutdoors.com\/2015\/05\/28\/lifesaving-lever-action-rifles-for-home-defense\/","menu_order":0,"post_type":"post","post_mime_type":"","comment_count":"0","filter":"raw"},{"ID":109242,"post_author":"303","post_date":"2015-05-25 09:00:37","post_date_gmt":"2015-05-25 13:00:37","post_content":"\n\nThe lever-action rifle is alive and doing quite well among both domestic and foreign makers, and there\u2019s a wide field to choose from in selecting one for home-defense use. Imagine what you want it to do before you go shopping around. The centerfire models will have a fair amount of crossover in serving both the home front and the hunting camp, if that\u2019s important to you, and you can obviously stretch your money farther by extending the dual utility of a true rifle caliber. The so-called pistol-caliber lever guns have the advantage of less recoil and ammunition commonality with handguns that might be in the house, and in any of the magnum calibers they\u2019re still no slouch. With practical ranges out to 150 yards and more in the hands of a good shooter, they can also easily handle both defense and hunting chores within their practical limitations. See the gallery above to learn about six manufacturers selling lever-action rifles.\n\n \n\nFor More Information<\/strong>\n\nWinchester\nhttp:\/\/www.winchesterguns.com<\/a>\n\nMarlin Firearms\nhttp:\/\/www.marlinfirearms.com<\/a>\n\nBrowning\nhttp:\/\/www.browning.com<\/a>\n\nHenry Repeating Arms\nhttp:\/\/www.henryrifles.com<\/a>\n\nMossberg\nhttp:\/\/www.mossberg.com<\/a>\n\nRossi USA\nhttp:\/\/www.rossiusa.com<\/a>\n\n \n\nRelated Stories<\/strong>\n\n4 New Old West Guns For 2015<\/a>\n\nNew For 2015: Browning AB3 Hunter Rifle<\/a>\n\nNew For 2015: Winchester XPR Bolt-Action Rifle<\/a>\n\nNew Sporting Rifles for 2014 | Varmint, Hunting & Long-Range Roundup<\/a>\n\nGun Review: Mossberg\u2019s Duck Commanders<\/a>","post_title":"6 Manufacturers Selling Lever-Action Rifles For Home Defense Or Hunting","post_excerpt":"There's a wide field of both domestic and foreign manufacturers offering lever-action rifles for home defense and hunting.","post_status":"publish","comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","post_password":"","post_name":"6-manufacturers-selling-lever-action-rifles-for-home-defense-or-hunting","to_ping":"","pinged":"https:\/\/www.personaldefenseworld.com\/2015\/04\/4-new-old-west-guns-for-2015\/#4-new-old-west-guns-for-2015\nhttps:\/\/www.personaldefenseworld.com\/2015\/02\/new-2015-browning-ab3-hunter-rifle\/\nhttps:\/\/www.personaldefenseworld.com\/2015\/01\/new-2015-winchester-xpr-bolt-action-rifle\/\nhttps:\/\/www.tactical-life.com\/firearms\/new-sporting-rifles-for-2014\/","post_modified":"2023-05-31 12:06:54","post_modified_gmt":"2023-05-31 12:06:54","post_content_filtered":"","post_parent":0,"guid":"https:\/\/www.dev.athlonoutdoors.com\/2015\/05\/25\/6-manufacturers-selling-lever-action-rifles-for-home-defense-or-hunting\/","menu_order":0,"post_type":"post","post_mime_type":"","comment_count":"0","filter":"raw"}],"next":false,"prev":true,"total_page":12},"paged":1,"column_class":"jeg_col_2o3","class":"jnews_block_23"};

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Today\u2019s takedown rifles are available in calibers as small as .22 Long Rifle and as big as the large African safari-class cartridges. Here\u2019s a sample of the great takedown rifles available to today\u2019s hunters.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

Henry U.S. Survival AR-7<\/h4>\n\n\n\n
\"Takedown<\/figure>\n\n\n\n

We've covered the Henry U.S. Survival AR-7 before<\/a>. This lightweight, .22 caliber subcompact takedown rifle has been the go-to survival rifle for bush pilots and backpackers since 1959. MSRP is $290 for the black version and $350 for the camo. For even more info, please visit henryrifles.com<\/a>.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

Marlin Model Golden 39A<\/h4>\n\n\n\n
\"Takedown
Marlin\u2019s .22-caliber Model Golden 39A rifle made its first appearance in 1891. It has been a favorite lever-action option for generations of shooters. MSRP: $709. <\/figcaption><\/figure>\n\n\n\n

Marlin\u2019s .22-caliber Model Golden 39A rifle made its first appearance in 1891. It has been a favorite lever-action option for generations of shooters. MSRP comes in at $709. For even more info, please visit marlinfirearms.com<\/a>.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

Taylor\u2019s 1892 Alaskan Takedown<\/h4>\n\n\n\n
\"Takedown<\/figure>\n\n\n\n

Another rifle we've covered at length before<\/a>. Lever-action rifles are the classic takedown rifle design. Taylor\u2019s Alaskan in .44 Magnum is a modified 1892 Winchester design that is very popular with Alaskan bush pilots for backwoods shooting. Lastly, MSRP comes in at $1,366. For even more info, please visit taylorsfirearms.com<\/a>.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

H-S Precision VTD Pro-Series 2000<\/h4>\n\n\n\n
\"H-S
H-S Precision is bringing the art of the takedown rifle into the\nmodern era. The Pro-Series 2000 is a stainless steel, bolt-action takedown\nrifle with a 22- to 26-inch match-grade barrel that can be chambered in anything from .204 Ruger to .458 Lott. MSRP $5,495. <\/figcaption><\/figure>\n\n\n\n

H-S Precision is bringing the art of the takedown rifle into the modern era. The Pro-Series 2000 is a stainless steel, bolt-action takedown rifle with a 22- to 26-inch match-grade barrel that can be chambered in anything from .204 Ruger to .458 Lott. MSRP is a cool $5,495. For even more info, please visit hsprecision.com<\/a>.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

Dakota Arms Model 76 Traveler<\/h4>\n\n\n\n
\"Dakota<\/figure>\n\n\n\n

This is the Cadillac of takedown rifles. The Traveler is available in three grades\u2014 Classic, Safari and African\u2014and you can choose from a limitless array of upgrades. This rifle has a unique takedown system that offers threadless assembly and disassembly. It\u2019s available in calibers from .22-250 to .450 Dakota. Lastly is MSRP, which comes in at $8,890. For even more info, please visit dakotaarms.com<\/a>.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

Sauer 202 Take Down<\/h4>\n\n\n\n
\"Sauer
This rifle raises the bar on standard takedown rifles. It has a solid action with a receiver that can accommodate all calibers from 6.5x55mm up to the massive .458 Lott. Numerous options and calibers are available, including beautifully figured stocks of grade 4 Turkish walnut. MSRP: 6,333 to $10,607. <\/figcaption><\/figure>\n\n\n\n

This rifle raises the bar on standard takedown rifles. It has a solid action with a receiver that can accommodate all calibers from 6.5x55mm up to the massive .458 Lott. Numerous options and calibers are available, including beautifully figured stocks of grade 4 Turkish walnut. MSRP can get up there, ranging from $6,333 to $10,607. For even more info, please visit sauer.de\/en<\/a>.<\/p>\n","post_title":"6 High-Quality Takedown Rifles for Easy Transport","post_excerpt":"","post_status":"publish","comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","post_password":"","post_name":"best-takedown-rifles","to_ping":"","pinged":"","post_modified":"2023-10-31 22:40:55","post_modified_gmt":"2023-11-01 02:40:55","post_content_filtered":"","post_parent":0,"guid":"https:\/\/www.dev.athlonoutdoors.com\/2015\/08\/26\/best-takedown-rifles\/","menu_order":0,"post_type":"post","post_mime_type":"","comment_count":"0","filter":"raw"},{"ID":109186,"post_author":"303","post_date":"2015-05-28 09:45:25","post_date_gmt":"2015-05-28 13:45:25","post_content":"\n\nOne of the greatest fallacies for those looking to upgrade or augment their home defense arsenal with a new long gun is the idea that you can\u2019t possibly defend your hearth and homestead without military-grade hardware, sophisticated optics and a 200-round drum magazine. Statistics, and reality, argue against that concept in terms of absolute requirements for repelling borders and defending castle walls. Do you typically need to blow off 200 rounds in a single in-home encounter or shoot the wings off a gnat at 300 yards? Nope. Do you really need to be lugging a 12-pound defensive package around the house? No again. So, what do you need?\n\nFirst off, as with any tool, look at the job the tool needs to do. Forget hordes of angry villagers with torches at the gates, or even herds of innocent zombies just out for a midnight snack. The statistical norm for a home \u201cattack\u201d is one or two people attempting to break in for one of three reasons: intoxication, anger or theft. These run anywhere from the drunk mistaking your home for somebody else\u2019s, the ex-boyfriend out for revenge, the classic (and random) middle-of-the-night burglar and the organized home invasion. With the exception of the more \u201ctargeted\u201d home invasion, most threats to the occupants are not particularly well thought out, not highly organized and not normally carried out by more than one or two hostiles. Most are close up, do not involve either extended timeframes or extended distances and do not burn up truckloads of ammunition.\n\nAn apartment dweller would rarely be shooting 300 yards in defense of wife and child, and the family living in a quiet suburban cul-de-sac is unlikely to need to shoot beyond the boundaries of either front yard or back fence. Obviously, the remote ranch house an hour from the nearest 911 response is a different matter, but for the majority of us, the home-defense rifle simply doesn\u2019t have to be a heavy, high-capacity, credit-card buster.\n\n\"lever-action, A tall gold bead like this Marbles Carbine Blade comes standard on some lever guns and can be ordered from Brownells.[\/caption]\n\nGiven all that, why do we even want a rifle in the first place? There are several reasons\u2014a rifle tends to be more powerful than a handgun (even when firing handgun ammunition because of velocity gains through longer barrels), it\u2019s frequently easier for many to shoot well at varying distances than a handgun, it extends the practical range over a handgun, it can be more intimidating to an intruder than the average handgun, and the right rifle can be relatively quick for even a non-gunnie to learn and operate effectively.\n\nRELATED STORY: 6 Manufacturers Selling Lever-Action Rifles For Home Defense Or Hunting<\/a><\/strong>\n\nIn choosing your rifle priority one is reliability. It has to function, should be simple to operate and should not be subject to ammo sensitivity against a wide range of brands and bullet types. Priority two is power, which should be in a \u201cserious\u201d caliber, such as .38 Special on up. And priority three, believe it or not, brings accuracy in last. It\u2019s nice to be able to hit a marauding gnat at 300 yards, but in most cases if your home-defense rifle can hold inside 4 inches at 100 yards, it\u2019ll be good enough.\n\nAll of this leads up, as you\u2019ve noticed, to the humble lever-action rifle as a candidate for your home-defense arsenal.\n\nThere\u2019s nothing wrong with the idea of a lever action, however archaic you perceive it to be. The repeating lever action rifle in many calibers, several models and multiple configurations was one of the original home-defense tools for much of the Western half of the U.S. for well over half a century, where it was just as effective in that role as it was in the hands of generations of hunters who brought home food for the table using it.\n\n\"lever-action, One of the advantages of a lever action is that you can tell at a glance if it\u2019s cocked or not.[\/caption]\n\nThe design is simple to learn: Fill it up through the loading gate, work the lever to chamber a round, cock the hammer, pull the trigger to fire, repeat as necessary. No separate magazines to lose or have fail to seat completely, no complicated controls to remember, no scope to knock loose, fog, or blur out at inside-the-house distances, no dead batteries, and less chance of \u201cspray-and-pray\u201d shooting as opposed to the average semi-auto like an AK-47 or AR-15.\n\nMagazine capacity, of course, is much less, but six to 10 rounds in a lever gun should easily handle 95 percent of the home-defense scenarios most of us are likely to encounter.\n\nWhich one should you choose? Look in your gun safe. You may already have what you need, whether it\u2019s Grandpa\u2019s old hand-me-down Winchester<\/a> in .30-30, a modern Browning BLR<\/a> in .308 Winchester, or even your Cowboy Action Shooting competition Marlin<\/a> or Uberti<\/a>. If not, evaluate your layout and decide whether you want the additional power and range for both indoor and outdoor applications of a centerfire rifle cartridge like the .30-30 or .308, or if a handgun caliber that\u2019ll be softer on the eardrums indoors while still easily carrying 50 or 75 yards outdoors would be a better choice.\n\nFor some, the utility of stockpiling one load for rifle and handgun, like the .357 Mag or .45 Colt, is a further consideration. For others, the ability of family members to tolerate recoil is a factor, and while I do recommend something heavier, in such cases the rimfires in .22 LR, .22 Mag and the hotter .17 calibers may be a better choice with no disconcerting recoil or extreme muzzle blast. My wife has two much-beloved Marlin 1894s<\/a> in .32-20 from her cowboy competition days. She knows them intimately, she shoots them better than anything else in the vault, and in her case, she\u2019d be far better off with her Marlins than with any of my tricked-out AR-15s if it came to somebody kicking our front door in.\n\nClose Quarters<\/strong>\n\n\"lever-action, \u201cShorter barrels can shoot every bit as accurately as longer barrels, and they maneuver infinitely better through tight confines\u2026 \u201d[\/caption]\n\nIndoor practicality dictates a short barrel. Shorter barrels can shoot every bit as accurately as longer barrels, and they maneuver infinitely better through tight confines and angles if you have to. The general recommendation in case of loud noises in the middle of the night is to congregate with a phone in one defensible location in the home while waiting for the sirens, but sometimes you have to do what you have to do, and a short, light, handy lever-action carbine just navigates easier all the way round than a longer barrel does. I do own Grandpa\u2019s old Winchester Model 94<\/a> in .30-30, and its 20-inch barrel is the longest I\u2019d go on a home-defense carbine by choice. I also have a 24-inch Marlin 1894 in .45 Colt that I could tolerate reasonably well, if it was all I had. Keep in mind that octagonal barrels will be heavier than round, and the shorter you go the less magazine capacity. There\u2019s no absolute, so buy what works best for you, or use what you already have if money\u2019s tight.\n\nRELATED STORY: Uberti\u2019s Silverboy Lever-Action Rifle in .22 LR<\/a><\/strong>\n\nLever action sights may not be outstanding, but they are typically usable as they come. The standard blade front\/notch rear is perfectly adequate for most shooters with decent eyesight out to 75 yards and farther, if necessary. Most can be easily adjusted out to 100 yards and used without expensive aftermarket products. If you do want refinements, an aperture rear can help with distances and a white-outline front blade, or a gold bead, can help line things up in darker lighting. Various methods of mounting scopes exist, with Marlins and Brownings being the easiest as they come pre-drilled and tapped for an optic. Indoors, a scope works against you and outdoors it can work for you, but it tends to slow down target acquisition. A good set of iron sights can put you right on target, right now, and that\u2019s important in close-up encounters.\n\nMost classic lever guns use under-barrel tube magazines, from the traditional side-loading Winchester to the \u201crimfire style\u201d on many .22 lever actions and on the Henry<\/a> rimfires and centerfires, where rounds are loaded through a port in the forward section of the magazine tube itself. The Browning BLR uses a detachable box magazine. In the most common home-defense context, there\u2019s no real advantage to any of these types since you\u2019re not looking at speed reloads anyway.\n\nIn the heavier calibers, consider a good recoil pad, if the new carbine doesn\u2019t already have one. The .30-30 is a fairly mild round for a rifle, but its stock design can punch a shoulder smartly with a solid steel or composite buttplate. Same with the .44 Mag caliber. You\u2019ll get more cooperation in learning and practice from family members if you reduce the \u201couch\u201d factor going in.\n\nThreat Takedown<\/strong>\n\n\"lever-action-rifles-7\"\n\nLearn how to work your home with your new lever gun once you make your choice. Take corners wide, where possible. Don\u2019t walk into a room or round a blind corner barrel-first\u2014you don\u2019t know who might be there to grab it. Don\u2019t round a close corner muzzle-up, it\u2019s too easy for an intruder to deflect the barrel or disarm you entirely. Navigate tight corners and doorways muzzle-down, making the gun harder to grab or deflect, and you can simply drop to one knee while pivoting the barrel up and firing if it is grabbed. Remember, the carbine can also make a very effective impact weapon, but make absolutely sure anybody using it understands whatever safety mechanism it may have. Simple, fast, light, reliable and affordable, the lever action still has a place.\n\nRELATED STORY: 15 New Guns and Accessories in the \"Old West\"<\/a><\/strong>","post_title":"Lifesaving Lever-Action Rifles For Home Defense","post_excerpt":"These classic lever-action rifles deliver reliable home-defense firepower when it matters most!","post_status":"publish","comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","post_password":"","post_name":"lifesaving-lever-action-rifles-for-home-defense","to_ping":"","pinged":"\nhttps:\/\/gunsoftheoldwest.com\/2015\/04\/15-new-guns-and-accessories-in-the-old-west\/","post_modified":"2023-05-31 12:06:26","post_modified_gmt":"2023-05-31 12:06:26","post_content_filtered":"","post_parent":0,"guid":"https:\/\/www.dev.athlonoutdoors.com\/2015\/05\/28\/lifesaving-lever-action-rifles-for-home-defense\/","menu_order":0,"post_type":"post","post_mime_type":"","comment_count":"0","filter":"raw"},{"ID":109242,"post_author":"303","post_date":"2015-05-25 09:00:37","post_date_gmt":"2015-05-25 13:00:37","post_content":"\n\nThe lever-action rifle is alive and doing quite well among both domestic and foreign makers, and there\u2019s a wide field to choose from in selecting one for home-defense use. Imagine what you want it to do before you go shopping around. The centerfire models will have a fair amount of crossover in serving both the home front and the hunting camp, if that\u2019s important to you, and you can obviously stretch your money farther by extending the dual utility of a true rifle caliber. The so-called pistol-caliber lever guns have the advantage of less recoil and ammunition commonality with handguns that might be in the house, and in any of the magnum calibers they\u2019re still no slouch. With practical ranges out to 150 yards and more in the hands of a good shooter, they can also easily handle both defense and hunting chores within their practical limitations. See the gallery above to learn about six manufacturers selling lever-action rifles.\n\n \n\nFor More Information<\/strong>\n\nWinchester\nhttp:\/\/www.winchesterguns.com<\/a>\n\nMarlin Firearms\nhttp:\/\/www.marlinfirearms.com<\/a>\n\nBrowning\nhttp:\/\/www.browning.com<\/a>\n\nHenry Repeating Arms\nhttp:\/\/www.henryrifles.com<\/a>\n\nMossberg\nhttp:\/\/www.mossberg.com<\/a>\n\nRossi USA\nhttp:\/\/www.rossiusa.com<\/a>\n\n \n\nRelated Stories<\/strong>\n\n4 New Old West Guns For 2015<\/a>\n\nNew For 2015: Browning AB3 Hunter Rifle<\/a>\n\nNew For 2015: Winchester XPR Bolt-Action Rifle<\/a>\n\nNew Sporting Rifles for 2014 | Varmint, Hunting & Long-Range Roundup<\/a>\n\nGun Review: Mossberg\u2019s Duck Commanders<\/a>","post_title":"6 Manufacturers Selling Lever-Action Rifles For Home Defense Or Hunting","post_excerpt":"There's a wide field of both domestic and foreign manufacturers offering lever-action rifles for home defense and hunting.","post_status":"publish","comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","post_password":"","post_name":"6-manufacturers-selling-lever-action-rifles-for-home-defense-or-hunting","to_ping":"","pinged":"https:\/\/www.personaldefenseworld.com\/2015\/04\/4-new-old-west-guns-for-2015\/#4-new-old-west-guns-for-2015\nhttps:\/\/www.personaldefenseworld.com\/2015\/02\/new-2015-browning-ab3-hunter-rifle\/\nhttps:\/\/www.personaldefenseworld.com\/2015\/01\/new-2015-winchester-xpr-bolt-action-rifle\/\nhttps:\/\/www.tactical-life.com\/firearms\/new-sporting-rifles-for-2014\/","post_modified":"2023-05-31 12:06:54","post_modified_gmt":"2023-05-31 12:06:54","post_content_filtered":"","post_parent":0,"guid":"https:\/\/www.dev.athlonoutdoors.com\/2015\/05\/25\/6-manufacturers-selling-lever-action-rifles-for-home-defense-or-hunting\/","menu_order":0,"post_type":"post","post_mime_type":"","comment_count":"0","filter":"raw"}],"next":false,"prev":true,"total_page":12},"paged":1,"column_class":"jeg_col_2o3","class":"jnews_block_23"};

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But even today, takedown rifles have retained their appeal wherever space is at a premium. Bush pilots and backcountry travelers in particular value these compact shooting tools.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

Today\u2019s takedown rifles are available in calibers as small as .22 Long Rifle and as big as the large African safari-class cartridges. Here\u2019s a sample of the great takedown rifles available to today\u2019s hunters.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

Henry U.S. Survival AR-7<\/h4>\n\n\n\n
\"Takedown<\/figure>\n\n\n\n

We've covered the Henry U.S. Survival AR-7 before<\/a>. This lightweight, .22 caliber subcompact takedown rifle has been the go-to survival rifle for bush pilots and backpackers since 1959. MSRP is $290 for the black version and $350 for the camo. For even more info, please visit henryrifles.com<\/a>.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

Marlin Model Golden 39A<\/h4>\n\n\n\n
\"Takedown
Marlin\u2019s .22-caliber Model Golden 39A rifle made its first appearance in 1891. It has been a favorite lever-action option for generations of shooters. MSRP: $709. <\/figcaption><\/figure>\n\n\n\n

Marlin\u2019s .22-caliber Model Golden 39A rifle made its first appearance in 1891. It has been a favorite lever-action option for generations of shooters. MSRP comes in at $709. For even more info, please visit marlinfirearms.com<\/a>.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

Taylor\u2019s 1892 Alaskan Takedown<\/h4>\n\n\n\n
\"Takedown<\/figure>\n\n\n\n

Another rifle we've covered at length before<\/a>. Lever-action rifles are the classic takedown rifle design. Taylor\u2019s Alaskan in .44 Magnum is a modified 1892 Winchester design that is very popular with Alaskan bush pilots for backwoods shooting. Lastly, MSRP comes in at $1,366. For even more info, please visit taylorsfirearms.com<\/a>.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

H-S Precision VTD Pro-Series 2000<\/h4>\n\n\n\n
\"H-S
H-S Precision is bringing the art of the takedown rifle into the\nmodern era. The Pro-Series 2000 is a stainless steel, bolt-action takedown\nrifle with a 22- to 26-inch match-grade barrel that can be chambered in anything from .204 Ruger to .458 Lott. MSRP $5,495. <\/figcaption><\/figure>\n\n\n\n

H-S Precision is bringing the art of the takedown rifle into the modern era. The Pro-Series 2000 is a stainless steel, bolt-action takedown rifle with a 22- to 26-inch match-grade barrel that can be chambered in anything from .204 Ruger to .458 Lott. MSRP is a cool $5,495. For even more info, please visit hsprecision.com<\/a>.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

Dakota Arms Model 76 Traveler<\/h4>\n\n\n\n
\"Dakota<\/figure>\n\n\n\n

This is the Cadillac of takedown rifles. The Traveler is available in three grades\u2014 Classic, Safari and African\u2014and you can choose from a limitless array of upgrades. This rifle has a unique takedown system that offers threadless assembly and disassembly. It\u2019s available in calibers from .22-250 to .450 Dakota. Lastly is MSRP, which comes in at $8,890. For even more info, please visit dakotaarms.com<\/a>.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

Sauer 202 Take Down<\/h4>\n\n\n\n
\"Sauer
This rifle raises the bar on standard takedown rifles. It has a solid action with a receiver that can accommodate all calibers from 6.5x55mm up to the massive .458 Lott. Numerous options and calibers are available, including beautifully figured stocks of grade 4 Turkish walnut. MSRP: 6,333 to $10,607. <\/figcaption><\/figure>\n\n\n\n

This rifle raises the bar on standard takedown rifles. It has a solid action with a receiver that can accommodate all calibers from 6.5x55mm up to the massive .458 Lott. Numerous options and calibers are available, including beautifully figured stocks of grade 4 Turkish walnut. MSRP can get up there, ranging from $6,333 to $10,607. For even more info, please visit sauer.de\/en<\/a>.<\/p>\n","post_title":"6 High-Quality Takedown Rifles for Easy Transport","post_excerpt":"","post_status":"publish","comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","post_password":"","post_name":"best-takedown-rifles","to_ping":"","pinged":"","post_modified":"2023-10-31 22:40:55","post_modified_gmt":"2023-11-01 02:40:55","post_content_filtered":"","post_parent":0,"guid":"https:\/\/www.dev.athlonoutdoors.com\/2015\/08\/26\/best-takedown-rifles\/","menu_order":0,"post_type":"post","post_mime_type":"","comment_count":"0","filter":"raw"},{"ID":109186,"post_author":"303","post_date":"2015-05-28 09:45:25","post_date_gmt":"2015-05-28 13:45:25","post_content":"\n\nOne of the greatest fallacies for those looking to upgrade or augment their home defense arsenal with a new long gun is the idea that you can\u2019t possibly defend your hearth and homestead without military-grade hardware, sophisticated optics and a 200-round drum magazine. Statistics, and reality, argue against that concept in terms of absolute requirements for repelling borders and defending castle walls. Do you typically need to blow off 200 rounds in a single in-home encounter or shoot the wings off a gnat at 300 yards? Nope. Do you really need to be lugging a 12-pound defensive package around the house? No again. So, what do you need?\n\nFirst off, as with any tool, look at the job the tool needs to do. Forget hordes of angry villagers with torches at the gates, or even herds of innocent zombies just out for a midnight snack. The statistical norm for a home \u201cattack\u201d is one or two people attempting to break in for one of three reasons: intoxication, anger or theft. These run anywhere from the drunk mistaking your home for somebody else\u2019s, the ex-boyfriend out for revenge, the classic (and random) middle-of-the-night burglar and the organized home invasion. With the exception of the more \u201ctargeted\u201d home invasion, most threats to the occupants are not particularly well thought out, not highly organized and not normally carried out by more than one or two hostiles. Most are close up, do not involve either extended timeframes or extended distances and do not burn up truckloads of ammunition.\n\nAn apartment dweller would rarely be shooting 300 yards in defense of wife and child, and the family living in a quiet suburban cul-de-sac is unlikely to need to shoot beyond the boundaries of either front yard or back fence. Obviously, the remote ranch house an hour from the nearest 911 response is a different matter, but for the majority of us, the home-defense rifle simply doesn\u2019t have to be a heavy, high-capacity, credit-card buster.\n\n\"lever-action, A tall gold bead like this Marbles Carbine Blade comes standard on some lever guns and can be ordered from Brownells.[\/caption]\n\nGiven all that, why do we even want a rifle in the first place? There are several reasons\u2014a rifle tends to be more powerful than a handgun (even when firing handgun ammunition because of velocity gains through longer barrels), it\u2019s frequently easier for many to shoot well at varying distances than a handgun, it extends the practical range over a handgun, it can be more intimidating to an intruder than the average handgun, and the right rifle can be relatively quick for even a non-gunnie to learn and operate effectively.\n\nRELATED STORY: 6 Manufacturers Selling Lever-Action Rifles For Home Defense Or Hunting<\/a><\/strong>\n\nIn choosing your rifle priority one is reliability. It has to function, should be simple to operate and should not be subject to ammo sensitivity against a wide range of brands and bullet types. Priority two is power, which should be in a \u201cserious\u201d caliber, such as .38 Special on up. And priority three, believe it or not, brings accuracy in last. It\u2019s nice to be able to hit a marauding gnat at 300 yards, but in most cases if your home-defense rifle can hold inside 4 inches at 100 yards, it\u2019ll be good enough.\n\nAll of this leads up, as you\u2019ve noticed, to the humble lever-action rifle as a candidate for your home-defense arsenal.\n\nThere\u2019s nothing wrong with the idea of a lever action, however archaic you perceive it to be. The repeating lever action rifle in many calibers, several models and multiple configurations was one of the original home-defense tools for much of the Western half of the U.S. for well over half a century, where it was just as effective in that role as it was in the hands of generations of hunters who brought home food for the table using it.\n\n\"lever-action, One of the advantages of a lever action is that you can tell at a glance if it\u2019s cocked or not.[\/caption]\n\nThe design is simple to learn: Fill it up through the loading gate, work the lever to chamber a round, cock the hammer, pull the trigger to fire, repeat as necessary. No separate magazines to lose or have fail to seat completely, no complicated controls to remember, no scope to knock loose, fog, or blur out at inside-the-house distances, no dead batteries, and less chance of \u201cspray-and-pray\u201d shooting as opposed to the average semi-auto like an AK-47 or AR-15.\n\nMagazine capacity, of course, is much less, but six to 10 rounds in a lever gun should easily handle 95 percent of the home-defense scenarios most of us are likely to encounter.\n\nWhich one should you choose? Look in your gun safe. You may already have what you need, whether it\u2019s Grandpa\u2019s old hand-me-down Winchester<\/a> in .30-30, a modern Browning BLR<\/a> in .308 Winchester, or even your Cowboy Action Shooting competition Marlin<\/a> or Uberti<\/a>. If not, evaluate your layout and decide whether you want the additional power and range for both indoor and outdoor applications of a centerfire rifle cartridge like the .30-30 or .308, or if a handgun caliber that\u2019ll be softer on the eardrums indoors while still easily carrying 50 or 75 yards outdoors would be a better choice.\n\nFor some, the utility of stockpiling one load for rifle and handgun, like the .357 Mag or .45 Colt, is a further consideration. For others, the ability of family members to tolerate recoil is a factor, and while I do recommend something heavier, in such cases the rimfires in .22 LR, .22 Mag and the hotter .17 calibers may be a better choice with no disconcerting recoil or extreme muzzle blast. My wife has two much-beloved Marlin 1894s<\/a> in .32-20 from her cowboy competition days. She knows them intimately, she shoots them better than anything else in the vault, and in her case, she\u2019d be far better off with her Marlins than with any of my tricked-out AR-15s if it came to somebody kicking our front door in.\n\nClose Quarters<\/strong>\n\n\"lever-action, \u201cShorter barrels can shoot every bit as accurately as longer barrels, and they maneuver infinitely better through tight confines\u2026 \u201d[\/caption]\n\nIndoor practicality dictates a short barrel. Shorter barrels can shoot every bit as accurately as longer barrels, and they maneuver infinitely better through tight confines and angles if you have to. The general recommendation in case of loud noises in the middle of the night is to congregate with a phone in one defensible location in the home while waiting for the sirens, but sometimes you have to do what you have to do, and a short, light, handy lever-action carbine just navigates easier all the way round than a longer barrel does. I do own Grandpa\u2019s old Winchester Model 94<\/a> in .30-30, and its 20-inch barrel is the longest I\u2019d go on a home-defense carbine by choice. I also have a 24-inch Marlin 1894 in .45 Colt that I could tolerate reasonably well, if it was all I had. Keep in mind that octagonal barrels will be heavier than round, and the shorter you go the less magazine capacity. There\u2019s no absolute, so buy what works best for you, or use what you already have if money\u2019s tight.\n\nRELATED STORY: Uberti\u2019s Silverboy Lever-Action Rifle in .22 LR<\/a><\/strong>\n\nLever action sights may not be outstanding, but they are typically usable as they come. The standard blade front\/notch rear is perfectly adequate for most shooters with decent eyesight out to 75 yards and farther, if necessary. Most can be easily adjusted out to 100 yards and used without expensive aftermarket products. If you do want refinements, an aperture rear can help with distances and a white-outline front blade, or a gold bead, can help line things up in darker lighting. Various methods of mounting scopes exist, with Marlins and Brownings being the easiest as they come pre-drilled and tapped for an optic. Indoors, a scope works against you and outdoors it can work for you, but it tends to slow down target acquisition. A good set of iron sights can put you right on target, right now, and that\u2019s important in close-up encounters.\n\nMost classic lever guns use under-barrel tube magazines, from the traditional side-loading Winchester to the \u201crimfire style\u201d on many .22 lever actions and on the Henry<\/a> rimfires and centerfires, where rounds are loaded through a port in the forward section of the magazine tube itself. The Browning BLR uses a detachable box magazine. In the most common home-defense context, there\u2019s no real advantage to any of these types since you\u2019re not looking at speed reloads anyway.\n\nIn the heavier calibers, consider a good recoil pad, if the new carbine doesn\u2019t already have one. The .30-30 is a fairly mild round for a rifle, but its stock design can punch a shoulder smartly with a solid steel or composite buttplate. Same with the .44 Mag caliber. You\u2019ll get more cooperation in learning and practice from family members if you reduce the \u201couch\u201d factor going in.\n\nThreat Takedown<\/strong>\n\n\"lever-action-rifles-7\"\n\nLearn how to work your home with your new lever gun once you make your choice. Take corners wide, where possible. Don\u2019t walk into a room or round a blind corner barrel-first\u2014you don\u2019t know who might be there to grab it. Don\u2019t round a close corner muzzle-up, it\u2019s too easy for an intruder to deflect the barrel or disarm you entirely. Navigate tight corners and doorways muzzle-down, making the gun harder to grab or deflect, and you can simply drop to one knee while pivoting the barrel up and firing if it is grabbed. Remember, the carbine can also make a very effective impact weapon, but make absolutely sure anybody using it understands whatever safety mechanism it may have. Simple, fast, light, reliable and affordable, the lever action still has a place.\n\nRELATED STORY: 15 New Guns and Accessories in the \"Old West\"<\/a><\/strong>","post_title":"Lifesaving Lever-Action Rifles For Home Defense","post_excerpt":"These classic lever-action rifles deliver reliable home-defense firepower when it matters most!","post_status":"publish","comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","post_password":"","post_name":"lifesaving-lever-action-rifles-for-home-defense","to_ping":"","pinged":"\nhttps:\/\/gunsoftheoldwest.com\/2015\/04\/15-new-guns-and-accessories-in-the-old-west\/","post_modified":"2023-05-31 12:06:26","post_modified_gmt":"2023-05-31 12:06:26","post_content_filtered":"","post_parent":0,"guid":"https:\/\/www.dev.athlonoutdoors.com\/2015\/05\/28\/lifesaving-lever-action-rifles-for-home-defense\/","menu_order":0,"post_type":"post","post_mime_type":"","comment_count":"0","filter":"raw"},{"ID":109242,"post_author":"303","post_date":"2015-05-25 09:00:37","post_date_gmt":"2015-05-25 13:00:37","post_content":"\n\nThe lever-action rifle is alive and doing quite well among both domestic and foreign makers, and there\u2019s a wide field to choose from in selecting one for home-defense use. Imagine what you want it to do before you go shopping around. The centerfire models will have a fair amount of crossover in serving both the home front and the hunting camp, if that\u2019s important to you, and you can obviously stretch your money farther by extending the dual utility of a true rifle caliber. The so-called pistol-caliber lever guns have the advantage of less recoil and ammunition commonality with handguns that might be in the house, and in any of the magnum calibers they\u2019re still no slouch. With practical ranges out to 150 yards and more in the hands of a good shooter, they can also easily handle both defense and hunting chores within their practical limitations. See the gallery above to learn about six manufacturers selling lever-action rifles.\n\n \n\nFor More Information<\/strong>\n\nWinchester\nhttp:\/\/www.winchesterguns.com<\/a>\n\nMarlin Firearms\nhttp:\/\/www.marlinfirearms.com<\/a>\n\nBrowning\nhttp:\/\/www.browning.com<\/a>\n\nHenry Repeating Arms\nhttp:\/\/www.henryrifles.com<\/a>\n\nMossberg\nhttp:\/\/www.mossberg.com<\/a>\n\nRossi USA\nhttp:\/\/www.rossiusa.com<\/a>\n\n \n\nRelated Stories<\/strong>\n\n4 New Old West Guns For 2015<\/a>\n\nNew For 2015: Browning AB3 Hunter Rifle<\/a>\n\nNew For 2015: Winchester XPR Bolt-Action Rifle<\/a>\n\nNew Sporting Rifles for 2014 | Varmint, Hunting & Long-Range Roundup<\/a>\n\nGun Review: Mossberg\u2019s Duck Commanders<\/a>","post_title":"6 Manufacturers Selling Lever-Action Rifles For Home Defense Or Hunting","post_excerpt":"There's a wide field of both domestic and foreign manufacturers offering lever-action rifles for home defense and hunting.","post_status":"publish","comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","post_password":"","post_name":"6-manufacturers-selling-lever-action-rifles-for-home-defense-or-hunting","to_ping":"","pinged":"https:\/\/www.personaldefenseworld.com\/2015\/04\/4-new-old-west-guns-for-2015\/#4-new-old-west-guns-for-2015\nhttps:\/\/www.personaldefenseworld.com\/2015\/02\/new-2015-browning-ab3-hunter-rifle\/\nhttps:\/\/www.personaldefenseworld.com\/2015\/01\/new-2015-winchester-xpr-bolt-action-rifle\/\nhttps:\/\/www.tactical-life.com\/firearms\/new-sporting-rifles-for-2014\/","post_modified":"2023-05-31 12:06:54","post_modified_gmt":"2023-05-31 12:06:54","post_content_filtered":"","post_parent":0,"guid":"https:\/\/www.dev.athlonoutdoors.com\/2015\/05\/25\/6-manufacturers-selling-lever-action-rifles-for-home-defense-or-hunting\/","menu_order":0,"post_type":"post","post_mime_type":"","comment_count":"0","filter":"raw"}],"next":false,"prev":true,"total_page":12},"paged":1,"column_class":"jeg_col_2o3","class":"jnews_block_23"};

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Today's Best Takedown Rifles<\/h2>\n\n\n\n

But even today, takedown rifles have retained their appeal wherever space is at a premium. Bush pilots and backcountry travelers in particular value these compact shooting tools.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

Today\u2019s takedown rifles are available in calibers as small as .22 Long Rifle and as big as the large African safari-class cartridges. Here\u2019s a sample of the great takedown rifles available to today\u2019s hunters.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

Henry U.S. Survival AR-7<\/h4>\n\n\n\n
\"Takedown<\/figure>\n\n\n\n

We've covered the Henry U.S. Survival AR-7 before<\/a>. This lightweight, .22 caliber subcompact takedown rifle has been the go-to survival rifle for bush pilots and backpackers since 1959. MSRP is $290 for the black version and $350 for the camo. For even more info, please visit henryrifles.com<\/a>.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

Marlin Model Golden 39A<\/h4>\n\n\n\n
\"Takedown
Marlin\u2019s .22-caliber Model Golden 39A rifle made its first appearance in 1891. It has been a favorite lever-action option for generations of shooters. MSRP: $709. <\/figcaption><\/figure>\n\n\n\n

Marlin\u2019s .22-caliber Model Golden 39A rifle made its first appearance in 1891. It has been a favorite lever-action option for generations of shooters. MSRP comes in at $709. For even more info, please visit marlinfirearms.com<\/a>.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

Taylor\u2019s 1892 Alaskan Takedown<\/h4>\n\n\n\n
\"Takedown<\/figure>\n\n\n\n

Another rifle we've covered at length before<\/a>. Lever-action rifles are the classic takedown rifle design. Taylor\u2019s Alaskan in .44 Magnum is a modified 1892 Winchester design that is very popular with Alaskan bush pilots for backwoods shooting. Lastly, MSRP comes in at $1,366. For even more info, please visit taylorsfirearms.com<\/a>.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

H-S Precision VTD Pro-Series 2000<\/h4>\n\n\n\n
\"H-S
H-S Precision is bringing the art of the takedown rifle into the\nmodern era. The Pro-Series 2000 is a stainless steel, bolt-action takedown\nrifle with a 22- to 26-inch match-grade barrel that can be chambered in anything from .204 Ruger to .458 Lott. MSRP $5,495. <\/figcaption><\/figure>\n\n\n\n

H-S Precision is bringing the art of the takedown rifle into the modern era. The Pro-Series 2000 is a stainless steel, bolt-action takedown rifle with a 22- to 26-inch match-grade barrel that can be chambered in anything from .204 Ruger to .458 Lott. MSRP is a cool $5,495. For even more info, please visit hsprecision.com<\/a>.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

Dakota Arms Model 76 Traveler<\/h4>\n\n\n\n
\"Dakota<\/figure>\n\n\n\n

This is the Cadillac of takedown rifles. The Traveler is available in three grades\u2014 Classic, Safari and African\u2014and you can choose from a limitless array of upgrades. This rifle has a unique takedown system that offers threadless assembly and disassembly. It\u2019s available in calibers from .22-250 to .450 Dakota. Lastly is MSRP, which comes in at $8,890. For even more info, please visit dakotaarms.com<\/a>.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

Sauer 202 Take Down<\/h4>\n\n\n\n
\"Sauer
This rifle raises the bar on standard takedown rifles. It has a solid action with a receiver that can accommodate all calibers from 6.5x55mm up to the massive .458 Lott. Numerous options and calibers are available, including beautifully figured stocks of grade 4 Turkish walnut. MSRP: 6,333 to $10,607. <\/figcaption><\/figure>\n\n\n\n

This rifle raises the bar on standard takedown rifles. It has a solid action with a receiver that can accommodate all calibers from 6.5x55mm up to the massive .458 Lott. Numerous options and calibers are available, including beautifully figured stocks of grade 4 Turkish walnut. MSRP can get up there, ranging from $6,333 to $10,607. For even more info, please visit sauer.de\/en<\/a>.<\/p>\n","post_title":"6 High-Quality Takedown Rifles for Easy Transport","post_excerpt":"","post_status":"publish","comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","post_password":"","post_name":"best-takedown-rifles","to_ping":"","pinged":"","post_modified":"2023-10-31 22:40:55","post_modified_gmt":"2023-11-01 02:40:55","post_content_filtered":"","post_parent":0,"guid":"https:\/\/www.dev.athlonoutdoors.com\/2015\/08\/26\/best-takedown-rifles\/","menu_order":0,"post_type":"post","post_mime_type":"","comment_count":"0","filter":"raw"},{"ID":109186,"post_author":"303","post_date":"2015-05-28 09:45:25","post_date_gmt":"2015-05-28 13:45:25","post_content":"\n\nOne of the greatest fallacies for those looking to upgrade or augment their home defense arsenal with a new long gun is the idea that you can\u2019t possibly defend your hearth and homestead without military-grade hardware, sophisticated optics and a 200-round drum magazine. Statistics, and reality, argue against that concept in terms of absolute requirements for repelling borders and defending castle walls. Do you typically need to blow off 200 rounds in a single in-home encounter or shoot the wings off a gnat at 300 yards? Nope. Do you really need to be lugging a 12-pound defensive package around the house? No again. So, what do you need?\n\nFirst off, as with any tool, look at the job the tool needs to do. Forget hordes of angry villagers with torches at the gates, or even herds of innocent zombies just out for a midnight snack. The statistical norm for a home \u201cattack\u201d is one or two people attempting to break in for one of three reasons: intoxication, anger or theft. These run anywhere from the drunk mistaking your home for somebody else\u2019s, the ex-boyfriend out for revenge, the classic (and random) middle-of-the-night burglar and the organized home invasion. With the exception of the more \u201ctargeted\u201d home invasion, most threats to the occupants are not particularly well thought out, not highly organized and not normally carried out by more than one or two hostiles. Most are close up, do not involve either extended timeframes or extended distances and do not burn up truckloads of ammunition.\n\nAn apartment dweller would rarely be shooting 300 yards in defense of wife and child, and the family living in a quiet suburban cul-de-sac is unlikely to need to shoot beyond the boundaries of either front yard or back fence. Obviously, the remote ranch house an hour from the nearest 911 response is a different matter, but for the majority of us, the home-defense rifle simply doesn\u2019t have to be a heavy, high-capacity, credit-card buster.\n\n\"lever-action, A tall gold bead like this Marbles Carbine Blade comes standard on some lever guns and can be ordered from Brownells.[\/caption]\n\nGiven all that, why do we even want a rifle in the first place? There are several reasons\u2014a rifle tends to be more powerful than a handgun (even when firing handgun ammunition because of velocity gains through longer barrels), it\u2019s frequently easier for many to shoot well at varying distances than a handgun, it extends the practical range over a handgun, it can be more intimidating to an intruder than the average handgun, and the right rifle can be relatively quick for even a non-gunnie to learn and operate effectively.\n\nRELATED STORY: 6 Manufacturers Selling Lever-Action Rifles For Home Defense Or Hunting<\/a><\/strong>\n\nIn choosing your rifle priority one is reliability. It has to function, should be simple to operate and should not be subject to ammo sensitivity against a wide range of brands and bullet types. Priority two is power, which should be in a \u201cserious\u201d caliber, such as .38 Special on up. And priority three, believe it or not, brings accuracy in last. It\u2019s nice to be able to hit a marauding gnat at 300 yards, but in most cases if your home-defense rifle can hold inside 4 inches at 100 yards, it\u2019ll be good enough.\n\nAll of this leads up, as you\u2019ve noticed, to the humble lever-action rifle as a candidate for your home-defense arsenal.\n\nThere\u2019s nothing wrong with the idea of a lever action, however archaic you perceive it to be. The repeating lever action rifle in many calibers, several models and multiple configurations was one of the original home-defense tools for much of the Western half of the U.S. for well over half a century, where it was just as effective in that role as it was in the hands of generations of hunters who brought home food for the table using it.\n\n\"lever-action, One of the advantages of a lever action is that you can tell at a glance if it\u2019s cocked or not.[\/caption]\n\nThe design is simple to learn: Fill it up through the loading gate, work the lever to chamber a round, cock the hammer, pull the trigger to fire, repeat as necessary. No separate magazines to lose or have fail to seat completely, no complicated controls to remember, no scope to knock loose, fog, or blur out at inside-the-house distances, no dead batteries, and less chance of \u201cspray-and-pray\u201d shooting as opposed to the average semi-auto like an AK-47 or AR-15.\n\nMagazine capacity, of course, is much less, but six to 10 rounds in a lever gun should easily handle 95 percent of the home-defense scenarios most of us are likely to encounter.\n\nWhich one should you choose? Look in your gun safe. You may already have what you need, whether it\u2019s Grandpa\u2019s old hand-me-down Winchester<\/a> in .30-30, a modern Browning BLR<\/a> in .308 Winchester, or even your Cowboy Action Shooting competition Marlin<\/a> or Uberti<\/a>. If not, evaluate your layout and decide whether you want the additional power and range for both indoor and outdoor applications of a centerfire rifle cartridge like the .30-30 or .308, or if a handgun caliber that\u2019ll be softer on the eardrums indoors while still easily carrying 50 or 75 yards outdoors would be a better choice.\n\nFor some, the utility of stockpiling one load for rifle and handgun, like the .357 Mag or .45 Colt, is a further consideration. For others, the ability of family members to tolerate recoil is a factor, and while I do recommend something heavier, in such cases the rimfires in .22 LR, .22 Mag and the hotter .17 calibers may be a better choice with no disconcerting recoil or extreme muzzle blast. My wife has two much-beloved Marlin 1894s<\/a> in .32-20 from her cowboy competition days. She knows them intimately, she shoots them better than anything else in the vault, and in her case, she\u2019d be far better off with her Marlins than with any of my tricked-out AR-15s if it came to somebody kicking our front door in.\n\nClose Quarters<\/strong>\n\n\"lever-action, \u201cShorter barrels can shoot every bit as accurately as longer barrels, and they maneuver infinitely better through tight confines\u2026 \u201d[\/caption]\n\nIndoor practicality dictates a short barrel. Shorter barrels can shoot every bit as accurately as longer barrels, and they maneuver infinitely better through tight confines and angles if you have to. The general recommendation in case of loud noises in the middle of the night is to congregate with a phone in one defensible location in the home while waiting for the sirens, but sometimes you have to do what you have to do, and a short, light, handy lever-action carbine just navigates easier all the way round than a longer barrel does. I do own Grandpa\u2019s old Winchester Model 94<\/a> in .30-30, and its 20-inch barrel is the longest I\u2019d go on a home-defense carbine by choice. I also have a 24-inch Marlin 1894 in .45 Colt that I could tolerate reasonably well, if it was all I had. Keep in mind that octagonal barrels will be heavier than round, and the shorter you go the less magazine capacity. There\u2019s no absolute, so buy what works best for you, or use what you already have if money\u2019s tight.\n\nRELATED STORY: Uberti\u2019s Silverboy Lever-Action Rifle in .22 LR<\/a><\/strong>\n\nLever action sights may not be outstanding, but they are typically usable as they come. The standard blade front\/notch rear is perfectly adequate for most shooters with decent eyesight out to 75 yards and farther, if necessary. Most can be easily adjusted out to 100 yards and used without expensive aftermarket products. If you do want refinements, an aperture rear can help with distances and a white-outline front blade, or a gold bead, can help line things up in darker lighting. Various methods of mounting scopes exist, with Marlins and Brownings being the easiest as they come pre-drilled and tapped for an optic. Indoors, a scope works against you and outdoors it can work for you, but it tends to slow down target acquisition. A good set of iron sights can put you right on target, right now, and that\u2019s important in close-up encounters.\n\nMost classic lever guns use under-barrel tube magazines, from the traditional side-loading Winchester to the \u201crimfire style\u201d on many .22 lever actions and on the Henry<\/a> rimfires and centerfires, where rounds are loaded through a port in the forward section of the magazine tube itself. The Browning BLR uses a detachable box magazine. In the most common home-defense context, there\u2019s no real advantage to any of these types since you\u2019re not looking at speed reloads anyway.\n\nIn the heavier calibers, consider a good recoil pad, if the new carbine doesn\u2019t already have one. The .30-30 is a fairly mild round for a rifle, but its stock design can punch a shoulder smartly with a solid steel or composite buttplate. Same with the .44 Mag caliber. You\u2019ll get more cooperation in learning and practice from family members if you reduce the \u201couch\u201d factor going in.\n\nThreat Takedown<\/strong>\n\n\"lever-action-rifles-7\"\n\nLearn how to work your home with your new lever gun once you make your choice. Take corners wide, where possible. Don\u2019t walk into a room or round a blind corner barrel-first\u2014you don\u2019t know who might be there to grab it. Don\u2019t round a close corner muzzle-up, it\u2019s too easy for an intruder to deflect the barrel or disarm you entirely. Navigate tight corners and doorways muzzle-down, making the gun harder to grab or deflect, and you can simply drop to one knee while pivoting the barrel up and firing if it is grabbed. Remember, the carbine can also make a very effective impact weapon, but make absolutely sure anybody using it understands whatever safety mechanism it may have. Simple, fast, light, reliable and affordable, the lever action still has a place.\n\nRELATED STORY: 15 New Guns and Accessories in the \"Old West\"<\/a><\/strong>","post_title":"Lifesaving Lever-Action Rifles For Home Defense","post_excerpt":"These classic lever-action rifles deliver reliable home-defense firepower when it matters most!","post_status":"publish","comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","post_password":"","post_name":"lifesaving-lever-action-rifles-for-home-defense","to_ping":"","pinged":"\nhttps:\/\/gunsoftheoldwest.com\/2015\/04\/15-new-guns-and-accessories-in-the-old-west\/","post_modified":"2023-05-31 12:06:26","post_modified_gmt":"2023-05-31 12:06:26","post_content_filtered":"","post_parent":0,"guid":"https:\/\/www.dev.athlonoutdoors.com\/2015\/05\/28\/lifesaving-lever-action-rifles-for-home-defense\/","menu_order":0,"post_type":"post","post_mime_type":"","comment_count":"0","filter":"raw"},{"ID":109242,"post_author":"303","post_date":"2015-05-25 09:00:37","post_date_gmt":"2015-05-25 13:00:37","post_content":"\n\nThe lever-action rifle is alive and doing quite well among both domestic and foreign makers, and there\u2019s a wide field to choose from in selecting one for home-defense use. Imagine what you want it to do before you go shopping around. The centerfire models will have a fair amount of crossover in serving both the home front and the hunting camp, if that\u2019s important to you, and you can obviously stretch your money farther by extending the dual utility of a true rifle caliber. The so-called pistol-caliber lever guns have the advantage of less recoil and ammunition commonality with handguns that might be in the house, and in any of the magnum calibers they\u2019re still no slouch. With practical ranges out to 150 yards and more in the hands of a good shooter, they can also easily handle both defense and hunting chores within their practical limitations. See the gallery above to learn about six manufacturers selling lever-action rifles.\n\n \n\nFor More Information<\/strong>\n\nWinchester\nhttp:\/\/www.winchesterguns.com<\/a>\n\nMarlin Firearms\nhttp:\/\/www.marlinfirearms.com<\/a>\n\nBrowning\nhttp:\/\/www.browning.com<\/a>\n\nHenry Repeating Arms\nhttp:\/\/www.henryrifles.com<\/a>\n\nMossberg\nhttp:\/\/www.mossberg.com<\/a>\n\nRossi USA\nhttp:\/\/www.rossiusa.com<\/a>\n\n \n\nRelated Stories<\/strong>\n\n4 New Old West Guns For 2015<\/a>\n\nNew For 2015: Browning AB3 Hunter Rifle<\/a>\n\nNew For 2015: Winchester XPR Bolt-Action Rifle<\/a>\n\nNew Sporting Rifles for 2014 | Varmint, Hunting & Long-Range Roundup<\/a>\n\nGun Review: Mossberg\u2019s Duck Commanders<\/a>","post_title":"6 Manufacturers Selling Lever-Action Rifles For Home Defense Or Hunting","post_excerpt":"There's a wide field of both domestic and foreign manufacturers offering lever-action rifles for home defense and hunting.","post_status":"publish","comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","post_password":"","post_name":"6-manufacturers-selling-lever-action-rifles-for-home-defense-or-hunting","to_ping":"","pinged":"https:\/\/www.personaldefenseworld.com\/2015\/04\/4-new-old-west-guns-for-2015\/#4-new-old-west-guns-for-2015\nhttps:\/\/www.personaldefenseworld.com\/2015\/02\/new-2015-browning-ab3-hunter-rifle\/\nhttps:\/\/www.personaldefenseworld.com\/2015\/01\/new-2015-winchester-xpr-bolt-action-rifle\/\nhttps:\/\/www.tactical-life.com\/firearms\/new-sporting-rifles-for-2014\/","post_modified":"2023-05-31 12:06:54","post_modified_gmt":"2023-05-31 12:06:54","post_content_filtered":"","post_parent":0,"guid":"https:\/\/www.dev.athlonoutdoors.com\/2015\/05\/25\/6-manufacturers-selling-lever-action-rifles-for-home-defense-or-hunting\/","menu_order":0,"post_type":"post","post_mime_type":"","comment_count":"0","filter":"raw"}],"next":false,"prev":true,"total_page":12},"paged":1,"column_class":"jeg_col_2o3","class":"jnews_block_23"};

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Takedown rifles are guns that can easily be broken into two much shorter sub-assemblies that can be more easily stored or transported. Takedown rifles reached their peak of popularity in the decades on either side of the turn of the last century.<\/p>\n\n\n\n\n\n

Today's Best Takedown Rifles<\/h2>\n\n\n\n

But even today, takedown rifles have retained their appeal wherever space is at a premium. Bush pilots and backcountry travelers in particular value these compact shooting tools.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

Today\u2019s takedown rifles are available in calibers as small as .22 Long Rifle and as big as the large African safari-class cartridges. Here\u2019s a sample of the great takedown rifles available to today\u2019s hunters.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

Henry U.S. Survival AR-7<\/h4>\n\n\n\n
\"Takedown<\/figure>\n\n\n\n

We've covered the Henry U.S. Survival AR-7 before<\/a>. This lightweight, .22 caliber subcompact takedown rifle has been the go-to survival rifle for bush pilots and backpackers since 1959. MSRP is $290 for the black version and $350 for the camo. For even more info, please visit henryrifles.com<\/a>.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

Marlin Model Golden 39A<\/h4>\n\n\n\n
\"Takedown
Marlin\u2019s .22-caliber Model Golden 39A rifle made its first appearance in 1891. It has been a favorite lever-action option for generations of shooters. MSRP: $709. <\/figcaption><\/figure>\n\n\n\n

Marlin\u2019s .22-caliber Model Golden 39A rifle made its first appearance in 1891. It has been a favorite lever-action option for generations of shooters. MSRP comes in at $709. For even more info, please visit marlinfirearms.com<\/a>.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

Taylor\u2019s 1892 Alaskan Takedown<\/h4>\n\n\n\n
\"Takedown<\/figure>\n\n\n\n

Another rifle we've covered at length before<\/a>. Lever-action rifles are the classic takedown rifle design. Taylor\u2019s Alaskan in .44 Magnum is a modified 1892 Winchester design that is very popular with Alaskan bush pilots for backwoods shooting. Lastly, MSRP comes in at $1,366. For even more info, please visit taylorsfirearms.com<\/a>.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

H-S Precision VTD Pro-Series 2000<\/h4>\n\n\n\n
\"H-S
H-S Precision is bringing the art of the takedown rifle into the\nmodern era. The Pro-Series 2000 is a stainless steel, bolt-action takedown\nrifle with a 22- to 26-inch match-grade barrel that can be chambered in anything from .204 Ruger to .458 Lott. MSRP $5,495. <\/figcaption><\/figure>\n\n\n\n

H-S Precision is bringing the art of the takedown rifle into the modern era. The Pro-Series 2000 is a stainless steel, bolt-action takedown rifle with a 22- to 26-inch match-grade barrel that can be chambered in anything from .204 Ruger to .458 Lott. MSRP is a cool $5,495. For even more info, please visit hsprecision.com<\/a>.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

Dakota Arms Model 76 Traveler<\/h4>\n\n\n\n
\"Dakota<\/figure>\n\n\n\n

This is the Cadillac of takedown rifles. The Traveler is available in three grades\u2014 Classic, Safari and African\u2014and you can choose from a limitless array of upgrades. This rifle has a unique takedown system that offers threadless assembly and disassembly. It\u2019s available in calibers from .22-250 to .450 Dakota. Lastly is MSRP, which comes in at $8,890. For even more info, please visit dakotaarms.com<\/a>.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

Sauer 202 Take Down<\/h4>\n\n\n\n
\"Sauer
This rifle raises the bar on standard takedown rifles. It has a solid action with a receiver that can accommodate all calibers from 6.5x55mm up to the massive .458 Lott. Numerous options and calibers are available, including beautifully figured stocks of grade 4 Turkish walnut. MSRP: 6,333 to $10,607. <\/figcaption><\/figure>\n\n\n\n

This rifle raises the bar on standard takedown rifles. It has a solid action with a receiver that can accommodate all calibers from 6.5x55mm up to the massive .458 Lott. Numerous options and calibers are available, including beautifully figured stocks of grade 4 Turkish walnut. MSRP can get up there, ranging from $6,333 to $10,607. For even more info, please visit sauer.de\/en<\/a>.<\/p>\n","post_title":"6 High-Quality Takedown Rifles for Easy Transport","post_excerpt":"","post_status":"publish","comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","post_password":"","post_name":"best-takedown-rifles","to_ping":"","pinged":"","post_modified":"2023-10-31 22:40:55","post_modified_gmt":"2023-11-01 02:40:55","post_content_filtered":"","post_parent":0,"guid":"https:\/\/www.dev.athlonoutdoors.com\/2015\/08\/26\/best-takedown-rifles\/","menu_order":0,"post_type":"post","post_mime_type":"","comment_count":"0","filter":"raw"},{"ID":109186,"post_author":"303","post_date":"2015-05-28 09:45:25","post_date_gmt":"2015-05-28 13:45:25","post_content":"\n\nOne of the greatest fallacies for those looking to upgrade or augment their home defense arsenal with a new long gun is the idea that you can\u2019t possibly defend your hearth and homestead without military-grade hardware, sophisticated optics and a 200-round drum magazine. Statistics, and reality, argue against that concept in terms of absolute requirements for repelling borders and defending castle walls. Do you typically need to blow off 200 rounds in a single in-home encounter or shoot the wings off a gnat at 300 yards? Nope. Do you really need to be lugging a 12-pound defensive package around the house? No again. So, what do you need?\n\nFirst off, as with any tool, look at the job the tool needs to do. Forget hordes of angry villagers with torches at the gates, or even herds of innocent zombies just out for a midnight snack. The statistical norm for a home \u201cattack\u201d is one or two people attempting to break in for one of three reasons: intoxication, anger or theft. These run anywhere from the drunk mistaking your home for somebody else\u2019s, the ex-boyfriend out for revenge, the classic (and random) middle-of-the-night burglar and the organized home invasion. With the exception of the more \u201ctargeted\u201d home invasion, most threats to the occupants are not particularly well thought out, not highly organized and not normally carried out by more than one or two hostiles. Most are close up, do not involve either extended timeframes or extended distances and do not burn up truckloads of ammunition.\n\nAn apartment dweller would rarely be shooting 300 yards in defense of wife and child, and the family living in a quiet suburban cul-de-sac is unlikely to need to shoot beyond the boundaries of either front yard or back fence. Obviously, the remote ranch house an hour from the nearest 911 response is a different matter, but for the majority of us, the home-defense rifle simply doesn\u2019t have to be a heavy, high-capacity, credit-card buster.\n\n\"lever-action, A tall gold bead like this Marbles Carbine Blade comes standard on some lever guns and can be ordered from Brownells.[\/caption]\n\nGiven all that, why do we even want a rifle in the first place? There are several reasons\u2014a rifle tends to be more powerful than a handgun (even when firing handgun ammunition because of velocity gains through longer barrels), it\u2019s frequently easier for many to shoot well at varying distances than a handgun, it extends the practical range over a handgun, it can be more intimidating to an intruder than the average handgun, and the right rifle can be relatively quick for even a non-gunnie to learn and operate effectively.\n\nRELATED STORY: 6 Manufacturers Selling Lever-Action Rifles For Home Defense Or Hunting<\/a><\/strong>\n\nIn choosing your rifle priority one is reliability. It has to function, should be simple to operate and should not be subject to ammo sensitivity against a wide range of brands and bullet types. Priority two is power, which should be in a \u201cserious\u201d caliber, such as .38 Special on up. And priority three, believe it or not, brings accuracy in last. It\u2019s nice to be able to hit a marauding gnat at 300 yards, but in most cases if your home-defense rifle can hold inside 4 inches at 100 yards, it\u2019ll be good enough.\n\nAll of this leads up, as you\u2019ve noticed, to the humble lever-action rifle as a candidate for your home-defense arsenal.\n\nThere\u2019s nothing wrong with the idea of a lever action, however archaic you perceive it to be. The repeating lever action rifle in many calibers, several models and multiple configurations was one of the original home-defense tools for much of the Western half of the U.S. for well over half a century, where it was just as effective in that role as it was in the hands of generations of hunters who brought home food for the table using it.\n\n\"lever-action, One of the advantages of a lever action is that you can tell at a glance if it\u2019s cocked or not.[\/caption]\n\nThe design is simple to learn: Fill it up through the loading gate, work the lever to chamber a round, cock the hammer, pull the trigger to fire, repeat as necessary. No separate magazines to lose or have fail to seat completely, no complicated controls to remember, no scope to knock loose, fog, or blur out at inside-the-house distances, no dead batteries, and less chance of \u201cspray-and-pray\u201d shooting as opposed to the average semi-auto like an AK-47 or AR-15.\n\nMagazine capacity, of course, is much less, but six to 10 rounds in a lever gun should easily handle 95 percent of the home-defense scenarios most of us are likely to encounter.\n\nWhich one should you choose? Look in your gun safe. You may already have what you need, whether it\u2019s Grandpa\u2019s old hand-me-down Winchester<\/a> in .30-30, a modern Browning BLR<\/a> in .308 Winchester, or even your Cowboy Action Shooting competition Marlin<\/a> or Uberti<\/a>. If not, evaluate your layout and decide whether you want the additional power and range for both indoor and outdoor applications of a centerfire rifle cartridge like the .30-30 or .308, or if a handgun caliber that\u2019ll be softer on the eardrums indoors while still easily carrying 50 or 75 yards outdoors would be a better choice.\n\nFor some, the utility of stockpiling one load for rifle and handgun, like the .357 Mag or .45 Colt, is a further consideration. For others, the ability of family members to tolerate recoil is a factor, and while I do recommend something heavier, in such cases the rimfires in .22 LR, .22 Mag and the hotter .17 calibers may be a better choice with no disconcerting recoil or extreme muzzle blast. My wife has two much-beloved Marlin 1894s<\/a> in .32-20 from her cowboy competition days. She knows them intimately, she shoots them better than anything else in the vault, and in her case, she\u2019d be far better off with her Marlins than with any of my tricked-out AR-15s if it came to somebody kicking our front door in.\n\nClose Quarters<\/strong>\n\n\"lever-action, \u201cShorter barrels can shoot every bit as accurately as longer barrels, and they maneuver infinitely better through tight confines\u2026 \u201d[\/caption]\n\nIndoor practicality dictates a short barrel. Shorter barrels can shoot every bit as accurately as longer barrels, and they maneuver infinitely better through tight confines and angles if you have to. The general recommendation in case of loud noises in the middle of the night is to congregate with a phone in one defensible location in the home while waiting for the sirens, but sometimes you have to do what you have to do, and a short, light, handy lever-action carbine just navigates easier all the way round than a longer barrel does. I do own Grandpa\u2019s old Winchester Model 94<\/a> in .30-30, and its 20-inch barrel is the longest I\u2019d go on a home-defense carbine by choice. I also have a 24-inch Marlin 1894 in .45 Colt that I could tolerate reasonably well, if it was all I had. Keep in mind that octagonal barrels will be heavier than round, and the shorter you go the less magazine capacity. There\u2019s no absolute, so buy what works best for you, or use what you already have if money\u2019s tight.\n\nRELATED STORY: Uberti\u2019s Silverboy Lever-Action Rifle in .22 LR<\/a><\/strong>\n\nLever action sights may not be outstanding, but they are typically usable as they come. The standard blade front\/notch rear is perfectly adequate for most shooters with decent eyesight out to 75 yards and farther, if necessary. Most can be easily adjusted out to 100 yards and used without expensive aftermarket products. If you do want refinements, an aperture rear can help with distances and a white-outline front blade, or a gold bead, can help line things up in darker lighting. Various methods of mounting scopes exist, with Marlins and Brownings being the easiest as they come pre-drilled and tapped for an optic. Indoors, a scope works against you and outdoors it can work for you, but it tends to slow down target acquisition. A good set of iron sights can put you right on target, right now, and that\u2019s important in close-up encounters.\n\nMost classic lever guns use under-barrel tube magazines, from the traditional side-loading Winchester to the \u201crimfire style\u201d on many .22 lever actions and on the Henry<\/a> rimfires and centerfires, where rounds are loaded through a port in the forward section of the magazine tube itself. The Browning BLR uses a detachable box magazine. In the most common home-defense context, there\u2019s no real advantage to any of these types since you\u2019re not looking at speed reloads anyway.\n\nIn the heavier calibers, consider a good recoil pad, if the new carbine doesn\u2019t already have one. The .30-30 is a fairly mild round for a rifle, but its stock design can punch a shoulder smartly with a solid steel or composite buttplate. Same with the .44 Mag caliber. You\u2019ll get more cooperation in learning and practice from family members if you reduce the \u201couch\u201d factor going in.\n\nThreat Takedown<\/strong>\n\n\"lever-action-rifles-7\"\n\nLearn how to work your home with your new lever gun once you make your choice. Take corners wide, where possible. Don\u2019t walk into a room or round a blind corner barrel-first\u2014you don\u2019t know who might be there to grab it. Don\u2019t round a close corner muzzle-up, it\u2019s too easy for an intruder to deflect the barrel or disarm you entirely. Navigate tight corners and doorways muzzle-down, making the gun harder to grab or deflect, and you can simply drop to one knee while pivoting the barrel up and firing if it is grabbed. Remember, the carbine can also make a very effective impact weapon, but make absolutely sure anybody using it understands whatever safety mechanism it may have. Simple, fast, light, reliable and affordable, the lever action still has a place.\n\nRELATED STORY: 15 New Guns and Accessories in the \"Old West\"<\/a><\/strong>","post_title":"Lifesaving Lever-Action Rifles For Home Defense","post_excerpt":"These classic lever-action rifles deliver reliable home-defense firepower when it matters most!","post_status":"publish","comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","post_password":"","post_name":"lifesaving-lever-action-rifles-for-home-defense","to_ping":"","pinged":"\nhttps:\/\/gunsoftheoldwest.com\/2015\/04\/15-new-guns-and-accessories-in-the-old-west\/","post_modified":"2023-05-31 12:06:26","post_modified_gmt":"2023-05-31 12:06:26","post_content_filtered":"","post_parent":0,"guid":"https:\/\/www.dev.athlonoutdoors.com\/2015\/05\/28\/lifesaving-lever-action-rifles-for-home-defense\/","menu_order":0,"post_type":"post","post_mime_type":"","comment_count":"0","filter":"raw"},{"ID":109242,"post_author":"303","post_date":"2015-05-25 09:00:37","post_date_gmt":"2015-05-25 13:00:37","post_content":"\n\nThe lever-action rifle is alive and doing quite well among both domestic and foreign makers, and there\u2019s a wide field to choose from in selecting one for home-defense use. Imagine what you want it to do before you go shopping around. The centerfire models will have a fair amount of crossover in serving both the home front and the hunting camp, if that\u2019s important to you, and you can obviously stretch your money farther by extending the dual utility of a true rifle caliber. The so-called pistol-caliber lever guns have the advantage of less recoil and ammunition commonality with handguns that might be in the house, and in any of the magnum calibers they\u2019re still no slouch. With practical ranges out to 150 yards and more in the hands of a good shooter, they can also easily handle both defense and hunting chores within their practical limitations. See the gallery above to learn about six manufacturers selling lever-action rifles.\n\n \n\nFor More Information<\/strong>\n\nWinchester\nhttp:\/\/www.winchesterguns.com<\/a>\n\nMarlin Firearms\nhttp:\/\/www.marlinfirearms.com<\/a>\n\nBrowning\nhttp:\/\/www.browning.com<\/a>\n\nHenry Repeating Arms\nhttp:\/\/www.henryrifles.com<\/a>\n\nMossberg\nhttp:\/\/www.mossberg.com<\/a>\n\nRossi USA\nhttp:\/\/www.rossiusa.com<\/a>\n\n \n\nRelated Stories<\/strong>\n\n4 New Old West Guns For 2015<\/a>\n\nNew For 2015: Browning AB3 Hunter Rifle<\/a>\n\nNew For 2015: Winchester XPR Bolt-Action Rifle<\/a>\n\nNew Sporting Rifles for 2014 | Varmint, Hunting & Long-Range Roundup<\/a>\n\nGun Review: Mossberg\u2019s Duck Commanders<\/a>","post_title":"6 Manufacturers Selling Lever-Action Rifles For Home Defense Or Hunting","post_excerpt":"There's a wide field of both domestic and foreign manufacturers offering lever-action rifles for home defense and hunting.","post_status":"publish","comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","post_password":"","post_name":"6-manufacturers-selling-lever-action-rifles-for-home-defense-or-hunting","to_ping":"","pinged":"https:\/\/www.personaldefenseworld.com\/2015\/04\/4-new-old-west-guns-for-2015\/#4-new-old-west-guns-for-2015\nhttps:\/\/www.personaldefenseworld.com\/2015\/02\/new-2015-browning-ab3-hunter-rifle\/\nhttps:\/\/www.personaldefenseworld.com\/2015\/01\/new-2015-winchester-xpr-bolt-action-rifle\/\nhttps:\/\/www.tactical-life.com\/firearms\/new-sporting-rifles-for-2014\/","post_modified":"2023-05-31 12:06:54","post_modified_gmt":"2023-05-31 12:06:54","post_content_filtered":"","post_parent":0,"guid":"https:\/\/www.dev.athlonoutdoors.com\/2015\/05\/25\/6-manufacturers-selling-lever-action-rifles-for-home-defense-or-hunting\/","menu_order":0,"post_type":"post","post_mime_type":"","comment_count":"0","filter":"raw"}],"next":false,"prev":true,"total_page":12},"paged":1,"column_class":"jeg_col_2o3","class":"jnews_block_23"};

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Load<\/td>Velocity<\/td>Accuracy<\/td><\/tr>
Hornady 125 FTX<\/td>1,754<\/td>1.27<\/td><\/tr>
Federal Premium 158 JHP<\/td>1,679<\/td>1.50<\/td><\/tr>
Remington 125 JHP<\/td>1,625<\/td>1.50<\/td><\/tr><\/tbody><\/table>
Bullet weight measured in grains; velocity measured in fps by chronograph; and accuracy measured in inches for best five-round groups at 100 feet.<\/em><\/figcaption><\/figure>\n","post_title":"Alaskan Takedown: The Taylor's & Co. Modernized Model 1892 in .357 Mag","post_excerpt":"","post_status":"publish","comment_status":"open","ping_status":"closed","post_password":"","post_name":"modernized-model-1892-alaskan-takedown","to_ping":"","pinged":"","post_modified":"2023-05-31 10:22:41","post_modified_gmt":"2023-05-31 10:22:41","post_content_filtered":"","post_parent":0,"guid":"https:\/\/www.dev.athlonoutdoors.com\/2016\/02\/25\/modernized-model-1892-alaskan-takedown\/","menu_order":0,"post_type":"post","post_mime_type":"","comment_count":"0","filter":"raw"},{"ID":105872,"post_author":"351","post_date":"2015-12-10 09:00:37","post_date_gmt":"2015-12-10 14:00:37","post_content":"\n\nThere are some fundamentals of personal and home defense that have never truly been improved upon since the 1870s. The Winchester lever action rifle, and its predecessor, the Henry rifle, are still being manufactured after more than 150 years. Yes, you can build them better today by using stronger materials, but, at their cores, the lever action and pump-action rifle are old dogs, yet they are just as capable in 2014 as they were in the late 19th century.\n\nRELATED STORY: Lifesaving Lever-Action Rifles For Home Defense<\/a><\/strong>\n\nAs far as lever-action rifles go, they\u2019re still being readily used by hunters, sportsmen, modern-day cattle ranchers and folks who favor the original repeating rifle designs of Benjamin Tyler Henry, Oliver Winchester, John Moses Browning and John Marlin. Back in their time, before the advent of the semi-auto, lever-action rifles like the Winchester were the fastest operating long arms in the world; there was nothing with the speed of a Model 1873 when it came to ejecting a spent shell and chambering the next round\u2014and you could do it without even taking your eye off the sights! Today, lever-action rifles like the famous Models 1873, 1892, 1894 and big caliber 1886 are still manufactured by Winchester, Browning, Marlin, as well as Mossberg, Remington and Italian arms-makers like Chiappa and Pedersoli. In 2014, Henry Repeating Arms introduced the first American-made reproduction of the famed Henry rifle since the 1860s!\n\nRELATED STORY: COMPLETE BOOK OF RIMFIRES<\/em> Buyer\u2019s Guide to Classic Rimfire Rifles<\/a><\/strong>\n\nModern chamberings for lever actions range from traditional handgun cartridges (as they have since the late 19th century) to modern-day, big-game magnum loads. Slightly more compact in size and generally with smaller cartridge capacity, today\u2019s carbine variations offer shorter overall lengths best suited for use in the field (carried in a saddle scabbard on horseback or mounted on an ATV). Full-size lever-action rifles, or shorter barreled carbines, are both practical, easy to operate, offer comparatively high capacities and are ideal for every use from target shooting to hunting to personal protection. Old dogs, new tricks!\n\nRELATED STORY: 8 AR-15 Rifles Available For Under $1,000<\/a><\/strong>\n\nThe pump-action rifle is less of a 21st-century success story, with most modern examples being relegated to cowboy action shooting and hunting. Only a handful of modern reproductions today are based on the original 1887 Colt Lightning design. The only contemporary variation is the Remington 7600, which is based on the Remington pump-action shotgun. Chambering for both lever- and pump-action rifles runs the gambit from the hefty old .45-70 to the popular .30-30, .308, .223 and a variety of revolver calibers, including the .45 Colt, .44 Mag and .357 Mag.\n\nFOR MORE INFORMATION\n<\/strong>\nChiappa Firearms\nhttp:\/\/www.chiappafirearms.com<\/a>\n\nDixie Gun Works\nhttp:\/\/www.dixiegunworks.com<\/a>\n\nHenry Repeating Arms\nhttps:\/\/www.henryrifles.com<\/a>\n\nMossberg\nhttp:\/\/www.mossberg.com<\/a>\n\nNavy Arms\nhttp:\/\/www.navyarms.com<\/a>\n\nDavide Pedersoli\nhttp:\/\/www.davide-pedersoli.com<\/a>\n\nRemington\nhttp:\/\/www.remington.com<\/a>\n\nRossi\nhttp:\/\/www.rossiusa.com<\/a>\n\nTaylor\u2019s & Co, Inc.\nhttp:\/\/www.taylorsfirearms.com<\/a>\n\nUberti\nhttp:\/\/www.uberti.com<\/a>","post_title":"10 Ultra-Reliable Lever And Pump-Action Rifles","post_excerpt":"The lever action and pump-action rifle are old dogs, yet they are just as capable in 2014 as they were in the late 19th century.","post_status":"publish","comment_status":"open","ping_status":"closed","post_password":"","post_name":"10-ultra-reliable-lever-and-pump-action-rifles","to_ping":"","pinged":"","post_modified":"2023-05-31 11:43:55","post_modified_gmt":"2023-05-31 11:43:55","post_content_filtered":"","post_parent":0,"guid":"https:\/\/www.dev.athlonoutdoors.com\/2015\/12\/10\/10-ultra-reliable-lever-and-pump-action-rifles\/","menu_order":0,"post_type":"post","post_mime_type":"","comment_count":"0","filter":"raw"},{"ID":5686,"post_author":"850","post_date":"2015-08-26 10:00:55","post_date_gmt":"2015-08-26 14:00:55","post_content":"\n

Takedown rifles are guns that can easily be broken into two much shorter sub-assemblies that can be more easily stored or transported. Takedown rifles reached their peak of popularity in the decades on either side of the turn of the last century.<\/p>\n\n\n\n\n\n

Today's Best Takedown Rifles<\/h2>\n\n\n\n

But even today, takedown rifles have retained their appeal wherever space is at a premium. Bush pilots and backcountry travelers in particular value these compact shooting tools.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

Today\u2019s takedown rifles are available in calibers as small as .22 Long Rifle and as big as the large African safari-class cartridges. Here\u2019s a sample of the great takedown rifles available to today\u2019s hunters.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

Henry U.S. Survival AR-7<\/h4>\n\n\n\n
\"Takedown<\/figure>\n\n\n\n

We've covered the Henry U.S. Survival AR-7 before<\/a>. This lightweight, .22 caliber subcompact takedown rifle has been the go-to survival rifle for bush pilots and backpackers since 1959. MSRP is $290 for the black version and $350 for the camo. For even more info, please visit henryrifles.com<\/a>.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

Marlin Model Golden 39A<\/h4>\n\n\n\n
\"Takedown
Marlin\u2019s .22-caliber Model Golden 39A rifle made its first appearance in 1891. It has been a favorite lever-action option for generations of shooters. MSRP: $709. <\/figcaption><\/figure>\n\n\n\n

Marlin\u2019s .22-caliber Model Golden 39A rifle made its first appearance in 1891. It has been a favorite lever-action option for generations of shooters. MSRP comes in at $709. For even more info, please visit marlinfirearms.com<\/a>.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

Taylor\u2019s 1892 Alaskan Takedown<\/h4>\n\n\n\n
\"Takedown<\/figure>\n\n\n\n

Another rifle we've covered at length before<\/a>. Lever-action rifles are the classic takedown rifle design. Taylor\u2019s Alaskan in .44 Magnum is a modified 1892 Winchester design that is very popular with Alaskan bush pilots for backwoods shooting. Lastly, MSRP comes in at $1,366. For even more info, please visit taylorsfirearms.com<\/a>.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

H-S Precision VTD Pro-Series 2000<\/h4>\n\n\n\n
\"H-S
H-S Precision is bringing the art of the takedown rifle into the\nmodern era. The Pro-Series 2000 is a stainless steel, bolt-action takedown\nrifle with a 22- to 26-inch match-grade barrel that can be chambered in anything from .204 Ruger to .458 Lott. MSRP $5,495. <\/figcaption><\/figure>\n\n\n\n

H-S Precision is bringing the art of the takedown rifle into the modern era. The Pro-Series 2000 is a stainless steel, bolt-action takedown rifle with a 22- to 26-inch match-grade barrel that can be chambered in anything from .204 Ruger to .458 Lott. MSRP is a cool $5,495. For even more info, please visit hsprecision.com<\/a>.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

Dakota Arms Model 76 Traveler<\/h4>\n\n\n\n
\"Dakota<\/figure>\n\n\n\n

This is the Cadillac of takedown rifles. The Traveler is available in three grades\u2014 Classic, Safari and African\u2014and you can choose from a limitless array of upgrades. This rifle has a unique takedown system that offers threadless assembly and disassembly. It\u2019s available in calibers from .22-250 to .450 Dakota. Lastly is MSRP, which comes in at $8,890. For even more info, please visit dakotaarms.com<\/a>.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

Sauer 202 Take Down<\/h4>\n\n\n\n
\"Sauer
This rifle raises the bar on standard takedown rifles. It has a solid action with a receiver that can accommodate all calibers from 6.5x55mm up to the massive .458 Lott. Numerous options and calibers are available, including beautifully figured stocks of grade 4 Turkish walnut. MSRP: 6,333 to $10,607. <\/figcaption><\/figure>\n\n\n\n

This rifle raises the bar on standard takedown rifles. It has a solid action with a receiver that can accommodate all calibers from 6.5x55mm up to the massive .458 Lott. Numerous options and calibers are available, including beautifully figured stocks of grade 4 Turkish walnut. MSRP can get up there, ranging from $6,333 to $10,607. For even more info, please visit sauer.de\/en<\/a>.<\/p>\n","post_title":"6 High-Quality Takedown Rifles for Easy Transport","post_excerpt":"","post_status":"publish","comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","post_password":"","post_name":"best-takedown-rifles","to_ping":"","pinged":"","post_modified":"2023-10-31 22:40:55","post_modified_gmt":"2023-11-01 02:40:55","post_content_filtered":"","post_parent":0,"guid":"https:\/\/www.dev.athlonoutdoors.com\/2015\/08\/26\/best-takedown-rifles\/","menu_order":0,"post_type":"post","post_mime_type":"","comment_count":"0","filter":"raw"},{"ID":109186,"post_author":"303","post_date":"2015-05-28 09:45:25","post_date_gmt":"2015-05-28 13:45:25","post_content":"\n\nOne of the greatest fallacies for those looking to upgrade or augment their home defense arsenal with a new long gun is the idea that you can\u2019t possibly defend your hearth and homestead without military-grade hardware, sophisticated optics and a 200-round drum magazine. Statistics, and reality, argue against that concept in terms of absolute requirements for repelling borders and defending castle walls. Do you typically need to blow off 200 rounds in a single in-home encounter or shoot the wings off a gnat at 300 yards? Nope. Do you really need to be lugging a 12-pound defensive package around the house? No again. So, what do you need?\n\nFirst off, as with any tool, look at the job the tool needs to do. Forget hordes of angry villagers with torches at the gates, or even herds of innocent zombies just out for a midnight snack. The statistical norm for a home \u201cattack\u201d is one or two people attempting to break in for one of three reasons: intoxication, anger or theft. These run anywhere from the drunk mistaking your home for somebody else\u2019s, the ex-boyfriend out for revenge, the classic (and random) middle-of-the-night burglar and the organized home invasion. With the exception of the more \u201ctargeted\u201d home invasion, most threats to the occupants are not particularly well thought out, not highly organized and not normally carried out by more than one or two hostiles. Most are close up, do not involve either extended timeframes or extended distances and do not burn up truckloads of ammunition.\n\nAn apartment dweller would rarely be shooting 300 yards in defense of wife and child, and the family living in a quiet suburban cul-de-sac is unlikely to need to shoot beyond the boundaries of either front yard or back fence. Obviously, the remote ranch house an hour from the nearest 911 response is a different matter, but for the majority of us, the home-defense rifle simply doesn\u2019t have to be a heavy, high-capacity, credit-card buster.\n\n\"lever-action, A tall gold bead like this Marbles Carbine Blade comes standard on some lever guns and can be ordered from Brownells.[\/caption]\n\nGiven all that, why do we even want a rifle in the first place? There are several reasons\u2014a rifle tends to be more powerful than a handgun (even when firing handgun ammunition because of velocity gains through longer barrels), it\u2019s frequently easier for many to shoot well at varying distances than a handgun, it extends the practical range over a handgun, it can be more intimidating to an intruder than the average handgun, and the right rifle can be relatively quick for even a non-gunnie to learn and operate effectively.\n\nRELATED STORY: 6 Manufacturers Selling Lever-Action Rifles For Home Defense Or Hunting<\/a><\/strong>\n\nIn choosing your rifle priority one is reliability. It has to function, should be simple to operate and should not be subject to ammo sensitivity against a wide range of brands and bullet types. Priority two is power, which should be in a \u201cserious\u201d caliber, such as .38 Special on up. And priority three, believe it or not, brings accuracy in last. It\u2019s nice to be able to hit a marauding gnat at 300 yards, but in most cases if your home-defense rifle can hold inside 4 inches at 100 yards, it\u2019ll be good enough.\n\nAll of this leads up, as you\u2019ve noticed, to the humble lever-action rifle as a candidate for your home-defense arsenal.\n\nThere\u2019s nothing wrong with the idea of a lever action, however archaic you perceive it to be. The repeating lever action rifle in many calibers, several models and multiple configurations was one of the original home-defense tools for much of the Western half of the U.S. for well over half a century, where it was just as effective in that role as it was in the hands of generations of hunters who brought home food for the table using it.\n\n\"lever-action, One of the advantages of a lever action is that you can tell at a glance if it\u2019s cocked or not.[\/caption]\n\nThe design is simple to learn: Fill it up through the loading gate, work the lever to chamber a round, cock the hammer, pull the trigger to fire, repeat as necessary. No separate magazines to lose or have fail to seat completely, no complicated controls to remember, no scope to knock loose, fog, or blur out at inside-the-house distances, no dead batteries, and less chance of \u201cspray-and-pray\u201d shooting as opposed to the average semi-auto like an AK-47 or AR-15.\n\nMagazine capacity, of course, is much less, but six to 10 rounds in a lever gun should easily handle 95 percent of the home-defense scenarios most of us are likely to encounter.\n\nWhich one should you choose? Look in your gun safe. You may already have what you need, whether it\u2019s Grandpa\u2019s old hand-me-down Winchester<\/a> in .30-30, a modern Browning BLR<\/a> in .308 Winchester, or even your Cowboy Action Shooting competition Marlin<\/a> or Uberti<\/a>. If not, evaluate your layout and decide whether you want the additional power and range for both indoor and outdoor applications of a centerfire rifle cartridge like the .30-30 or .308, or if a handgun caliber that\u2019ll be softer on the eardrums indoors while still easily carrying 50 or 75 yards outdoors would be a better choice.\n\nFor some, the utility of stockpiling one load for rifle and handgun, like the .357 Mag or .45 Colt, is a further consideration. For others, the ability of family members to tolerate recoil is a factor, and while I do recommend something heavier, in such cases the rimfires in .22 LR, .22 Mag and the hotter .17 calibers may be a better choice with no disconcerting recoil or extreme muzzle blast. My wife has two much-beloved Marlin 1894s<\/a> in .32-20 from her cowboy competition days. She knows them intimately, she shoots them better than anything else in the vault, and in her case, she\u2019d be far better off with her Marlins than with any of my tricked-out AR-15s if it came to somebody kicking our front door in.\n\nClose Quarters<\/strong>\n\n\"lever-action, \u201cShorter barrels can shoot every bit as accurately as longer barrels, and they maneuver infinitely better through tight confines\u2026 \u201d[\/caption]\n\nIndoor practicality dictates a short barrel. Shorter barrels can shoot every bit as accurately as longer barrels, and they maneuver infinitely better through tight confines and angles if you have to. The general recommendation in case of loud noises in the middle of the night is to congregate with a phone in one defensible location in the home while waiting for the sirens, but sometimes you have to do what you have to do, and a short, light, handy lever-action carbine just navigates easier all the way round than a longer barrel does. I do own Grandpa\u2019s old Winchester Model 94<\/a> in .30-30, and its 20-inch barrel is the longest I\u2019d go on a home-defense carbine by choice. I also have a 24-inch Marlin 1894 in .45 Colt that I could tolerate reasonably well, if it was all I had. Keep in mind that octagonal barrels will be heavier than round, and the shorter you go the less magazine capacity. There\u2019s no absolute, so buy what works best for you, or use what you already have if money\u2019s tight.\n\nRELATED STORY: Uberti\u2019s Silverboy Lever-Action Rifle in .22 LR<\/a><\/strong>\n\nLever action sights may not be outstanding, but they are typically usable as they come. The standard blade front\/notch rear is perfectly adequate for most shooters with decent eyesight out to 75 yards and farther, if necessary. Most can be easily adjusted out to 100 yards and used without expensive aftermarket products. If you do want refinements, an aperture rear can help with distances and a white-outline front blade, or a gold bead, can help line things up in darker lighting. Various methods of mounting scopes exist, with Marlins and Brownings being the easiest as they come pre-drilled and tapped for an optic. Indoors, a scope works against you and outdoors it can work for you, but it tends to slow down target acquisition. A good set of iron sights can put you right on target, right now, and that\u2019s important in close-up encounters.\n\nMost classic lever guns use under-barrel tube magazines, from the traditional side-loading Winchester to the \u201crimfire style\u201d on many .22 lever actions and on the Henry<\/a> rimfires and centerfires, where rounds are loaded through a port in the forward section of the magazine tube itself. The Browning BLR uses a detachable box magazine. In the most common home-defense context, there\u2019s no real advantage to any of these types since you\u2019re not looking at speed reloads anyway.\n\nIn the heavier calibers, consider a good recoil pad, if the new carbine doesn\u2019t already have one. The .30-30 is a fairly mild round for a rifle, but its stock design can punch a shoulder smartly with a solid steel or composite buttplate. Same with the .44 Mag caliber. You\u2019ll get more cooperation in learning and practice from family members if you reduce the \u201couch\u201d factor going in.\n\nThreat Takedown<\/strong>\n\n\"lever-action-rifles-7\"\n\nLearn how to work your home with your new lever gun once you make your choice. Take corners wide, where possible. Don\u2019t walk into a room or round a blind corner barrel-first\u2014you don\u2019t know who might be there to grab it. Don\u2019t round a close corner muzzle-up, it\u2019s too easy for an intruder to deflect the barrel or disarm you entirely. Navigate tight corners and doorways muzzle-down, making the gun harder to grab or deflect, and you can simply drop to one knee while pivoting the barrel up and firing if it is grabbed. Remember, the carbine can also make a very effective impact weapon, but make absolutely sure anybody using it understands whatever safety mechanism it may have. Simple, fast, light, reliable and affordable, the lever action still has a place.\n\nRELATED STORY: 15 New Guns and Accessories in the \"Old West\"<\/a><\/strong>","post_title":"Lifesaving Lever-Action Rifles For Home Defense","post_excerpt":"These classic lever-action rifles deliver reliable home-defense firepower when it matters most!","post_status":"publish","comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","post_password":"","post_name":"lifesaving-lever-action-rifles-for-home-defense","to_ping":"","pinged":"\nhttps:\/\/gunsoftheoldwest.com\/2015\/04\/15-new-guns-and-accessories-in-the-old-west\/","post_modified":"2023-05-31 12:06:26","post_modified_gmt":"2023-05-31 12:06:26","post_content_filtered":"","post_parent":0,"guid":"https:\/\/www.dev.athlonoutdoors.com\/2015\/05\/28\/lifesaving-lever-action-rifles-for-home-defense\/","menu_order":0,"post_type":"post","post_mime_type":"","comment_count":"0","filter":"raw"},{"ID":109242,"post_author":"303","post_date":"2015-05-25 09:00:37","post_date_gmt":"2015-05-25 13:00:37","post_content":"\n\nThe lever-action rifle is alive and doing quite well among both domestic and foreign makers, and there\u2019s a wide field to choose from in selecting one for home-defense use. Imagine what you want it to do before you go shopping around. The centerfire models will have a fair amount of crossover in serving both the home front and the hunting camp, if that\u2019s important to you, and you can obviously stretch your money farther by extending the dual utility of a true rifle caliber. The so-called pistol-caliber lever guns have the advantage of less recoil and ammunition commonality with handguns that might be in the house, and in any of the magnum calibers they\u2019re still no slouch. With practical ranges out to 150 yards and more in the hands of a good shooter, they can also easily handle both defense and hunting chores within their practical limitations. See the gallery above to learn about six manufacturers selling lever-action rifles.\n\n \n\nFor More Information<\/strong>\n\nWinchester\nhttp:\/\/www.winchesterguns.com<\/a>\n\nMarlin Firearms\nhttp:\/\/www.marlinfirearms.com<\/a>\n\nBrowning\nhttp:\/\/www.browning.com<\/a>\n\nHenry Repeating Arms\nhttp:\/\/www.henryrifles.com<\/a>\n\nMossberg\nhttp:\/\/www.mossberg.com<\/a>\n\nRossi USA\nhttp:\/\/www.rossiusa.com<\/a>\n\n \n\nRelated Stories<\/strong>\n\n4 New Old West Guns For 2015<\/a>\n\nNew For 2015: Browning AB3 Hunter Rifle<\/a>\n\nNew For 2015: Winchester XPR Bolt-Action Rifle<\/a>\n\nNew Sporting Rifles for 2014 | Varmint, Hunting & Long-Range Roundup<\/a>\n\nGun Review: Mossberg\u2019s Duck Commanders<\/a>","post_title":"6 Manufacturers Selling Lever-Action Rifles For Home Defense Or Hunting","post_excerpt":"There's a wide field of both domestic and foreign manufacturers offering lever-action rifles for home defense and hunting.","post_status":"publish","comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","post_password":"","post_name":"6-manufacturers-selling-lever-action-rifles-for-home-defense-or-hunting","to_ping":"","pinged":"https:\/\/www.personaldefenseworld.com\/2015\/04\/4-new-old-west-guns-for-2015\/#4-new-old-west-guns-for-2015\nhttps:\/\/www.personaldefenseworld.com\/2015\/02\/new-2015-browning-ab3-hunter-rifle\/\nhttps:\/\/www.personaldefenseworld.com\/2015\/01\/new-2015-winchester-xpr-bolt-action-rifle\/\nhttps:\/\/www.tactical-life.com\/firearms\/new-sporting-rifles-for-2014\/","post_modified":"2023-05-31 12:06:54","post_modified_gmt":"2023-05-31 12:06:54","post_content_filtered":"","post_parent":0,"guid":"https:\/\/www.dev.athlonoutdoors.com\/2015\/05\/25\/6-manufacturers-selling-lever-action-rifles-for-home-defense-or-hunting\/","menu_order":0,"post_type":"post","post_mime_type":"","comment_count":"0","filter":"raw"}],"next":false,"prev":true,"total_page":12},"paged":1,"column_class":"jeg_col_2o3","class":"jnews_block_23"};

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Taylor's & Co. 1892 Alaskan Takedown Performance<\/h4>\n\n\n\n
Load<\/td>Velocity<\/td>Accuracy<\/td><\/tr>
Hornady 125 FTX<\/td>1,754<\/td>1.27<\/td><\/tr>
Federal Premium 158 JHP<\/td>1,679<\/td>1.50<\/td><\/tr>
Remington 125 JHP<\/td>1,625<\/td>1.50<\/td><\/tr><\/tbody><\/table>
Bullet weight measured in grains; velocity measured in fps by chronograph; and accuracy measured in inches for best five-round groups at 100 feet.<\/em><\/figcaption><\/figure>\n","post_title":"Alaskan Takedown: The Taylor's & Co. Modernized Model 1892 in .357 Mag","post_excerpt":"","post_status":"publish","comment_status":"open","ping_status":"closed","post_password":"","post_name":"modernized-model-1892-alaskan-takedown","to_ping":"","pinged":"","post_modified":"2023-05-31 10:22:41","post_modified_gmt":"2023-05-31 10:22:41","post_content_filtered":"","post_parent":0,"guid":"https:\/\/www.dev.athlonoutdoors.com\/2016\/02\/25\/modernized-model-1892-alaskan-takedown\/","menu_order":0,"post_type":"post","post_mime_type":"","comment_count":"0","filter":"raw"},{"ID":105872,"post_author":"351","post_date":"2015-12-10 09:00:37","post_date_gmt":"2015-12-10 14:00:37","post_content":"\n\nThere are some fundamentals of personal and home defense that have never truly been improved upon since the 1870s. The Winchester lever action rifle, and its predecessor, the Henry rifle, are still being manufactured after more than 150 years. Yes, you can build them better today by using stronger materials, but, at their cores, the lever action and pump-action rifle are old dogs, yet they are just as capable in 2014 as they were in the late 19th century.\n\nRELATED STORY: Lifesaving Lever-Action Rifles For Home Defense<\/a><\/strong>\n\nAs far as lever-action rifles go, they\u2019re still being readily used by hunters, sportsmen, modern-day cattle ranchers and folks who favor the original repeating rifle designs of Benjamin Tyler Henry, Oliver Winchester, John Moses Browning and John Marlin. Back in their time, before the advent of the semi-auto, lever-action rifles like the Winchester were the fastest operating long arms in the world; there was nothing with the speed of a Model 1873 when it came to ejecting a spent shell and chambering the next round\u2014and you could do it without even taking your eye off the sights! Today, lever-action rifles like the famous Models 1873, 1892, 1894 and big caliber 1886 are still manufactured by Winchester, Browning, Marlin, as well as Mossberg, Remington and Italian arms-makers like Chiappa and Pedersoli. In 2014, Henry Repeating Arms introduced the first American-made reproduction of the famed Henry rifle since the 1860s!\n\nRELATED STORY: COMPLETE BOOK OF RIMFIRES<\/em> Buyer\u2019s Guide to Classic Rimfire Rifles<\/a><\/strong>\n\nModern chamberings for lever actions range from traditional handgun cartridges (as they have since the late 19th century) to modern-day, big-game magnum loads. Slightly more compact in size and generally with smaller cartridge capacity, today\u2019s carbine variations offer shorter overall lengths best suited for use in the field (carried in a saddle scabbard on horseback or mounted on an ATV). Full-size lever-action rifles, or shorter barreled carbines, are both practical, easy to operate, offer comparatively high capacities and are ideal for every use from target shooting to hunting to personal protection. Old dogs, new tricks!\n\nRELATED STORY: 8 AR-15 Rifles Available For Under $1,000<\/a><\/strong>\n\nThe pump-action rifle is less of a 21st-century success story, with most modern examples being relegated to cowboy action shooting and hunting. Only a handful of modern reproductions today are based on the original 1887 Colt Lightning design. The only contemporary variation is the Remington 7600, which is based on the Remington pump-action shotgun. Chambering for both lever- and pump-action rifles runs the gambit from the hefty old .45-70 to the popular .30-30, .308, .223 and a variety of revolver calibers, including the .45 Colt, .44 Mag and .357 Mag.\n\nFOR MORE INFORMATION\n<\/strong>\nChiappa Firearms\nhttp:\/\/www.chiappafirearms.com<\/a>\n\nDixie Gun Works\nhttp:\/\/www.dixiegunworks.com<\/a>\n\nHenry Repeating Arms\nhttps:\/\/www.henryrifles.com<\/a>\n\nMossberg\nhttp:\/\/www.mossberg.com<\/a>\n\nNavy Arms\nhttp:\/\/www.navyarms.com<\/a>\n\nDavide Pedersoli\nhttp:\/\/www.davide-pedersoli.com<\/a>\n\nRemington\nhttp:\/\/www.remington.com<\/a>\n\nRossi\nhttp:\/\/www.rossiusa.com<\/a>\n\nTaylor\u2019s & Co, Inc.\nhttp:\/\/www.taylorsfirearms.com<\/a>\n\nUberti\nhttp:\/\/www.uberti.com<\/a>","post_title":"10 Ultra-Reliable Lever And Pump-Action Rifles","post_excerpt":"The lever action and pump-action rifle are old dogs, yet they are just as capable in 2014 as they were in the late 19th century.","post_status":"publish","comment_status":"open","ping_status":"closed","post_password":"","post_name":"10-ultra-reliable-lever-and-pump-action-rifles","to_ping":"","pinged":"","post_modified":"2023-05-31 11:43:55","post_modified_gmt":"2023-05-31 11:43:55","post_content_filtered":"","post_parent":0,"guid":"https:\/\/www.dev.athlonoutdoors.com\/2015\/12\/10\/10-ultra-reliable-lever-and-pump-action-rifles\/","menu_order":0,"post_type":"post","post_mime_type":"","comment_count":"0","filter":"raw"},{"ID":5686,"post_author":"850","post_date":"2015-08-26 10:00:55","post_date_gmt":"2015-08-26 14:00:55","post_content":"\n

Takedown rifles are guns that can easily be broken into two much shorter sub-assemblies that can be more easily stored or transported. Takedown rifles reached their peak of popularity in the decades on either side of the turn of the last century.<\/p>\n\n\n\n\n\n

Today's Best Takedown Rifles<\/h2>\n\n\n\n

But even today, takedown rifles have retained their appeal wherever space is at a premium. Bush pilots and backcountry travelers in particular value these compact shooting tools.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

Today\u2019s takedown rifles are available in calibers as small as .22 Long Rifle and as big as the large African safari-class cartridges. Here\u2019s a sample of the great takedown rifles available to today\u2019s hunters.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

Henry U.S. Survival AR-7<\/h4>\n\n\n\n
\"Takedown<\/figure>\n\n\n\n

We've covered the Henry U.S. Survival AR-7 before<\/a>. This lightweight, .22 caliber subcompact takedown rifle has been the go-to survival rifle for bush pilots and backpackers since 1959. MSRP is $290 for the black version and $350 for the camo. For even more info, please visit henryrifles.com<\/a>.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

Marlin Model Golden 39A<\/h4>\n\n\n\n
\"Takedown
Marlin\u2019s .22-caliber Model Golden 39A rifle made its first appearance in 1891. It has been a favorite lever-action option for generations of shooters. MSRP: $709. <\/figcaption><\/figure>\n\n\n\n

Marlin\u2019s .22-caliber Model Golden 39A rifle made its first appearance in 1891. It has been a favorite lever-action option for generations of shooters. MSRP comes in at $709. For even more info, please visit marlinfirearms.com<\/a>.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

Taylor\u2019s 1892 Alaskan Takedown<\/h4>\n\n\n\n
\"Takedown<\/figure>\n\n\n\n

Another rifle we've covered at length before<\/a>. Lever-action rifles are the classic takedown rifle design. Taylor\u2019s Alaskan in .44 Magnum is a modified 1892 Winchester design that is very popular with Alaskan bush pilots for backwoods shooting. Lastly, MSRP comes in at $1,366. For even more info, please visit taylorsfirearms.com<\/a>.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

H-S Precision VTD Pro-Series 2000<\/h4>\n\n\n\n
\"H-S
H-S Precision is bringing the art of the takedown rifle into the\nmodern era. The Pro-Series 2000 is a stainless steel, bolt-action takedown\nrifle with a 22- to 26-inch match-grade barrel that can be chambered in anything from .204 Ruger to .458 Lott. MSRP $5,495. <\/figcaption><\/figure>\n\n\n\n

H-S Precision is bringing the art of the takedown rifle into the modern era. The Pro-Series 2000 is a stainless steel, bolt-action takedown rifle with a 22- to 26-inch match-grade barrel that can be chambered in anything from .204 Ruger to .458 Lott. MSRP is a cool $5,495. For even more info, please visit hsprecision.com<\/a>.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

Dakota Arms Model 76 Traveler<\/h4>\n\n\n\n
\"Dakota<\/figure>\n\n\n\n

This is the Cadillac of takedown rifles. The Traveler is available in three grades\u2014 Classic, Safari and African\u2014and you can choose from a limitless array of upgrades. This rifle has a unique takedown system that offers threadless assembly and disassembly. It\u2019s available in calibers from .22-250 to .450 Dakota. Lastly is MSRP, which comes in at $8,890. For even more info, please visit dakotaarms.com<\/a>.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

Sauer 202 Take Down<\/h4>\n\n\n\n
\"Sauer
This rifle raises the bar on standard takedown rifles. It has a solid action with a receiver that can accommodate all calibers from 6.5x55mm up to the massive .458 Lott. Numerous options and calibers are available, including beautifully figured stocks of grade 4 Turkish walnut. MSRP: 6,333 to $10,607. <\/figcaption><\/figure>\n\n\n\n

This rifle raises the bar on standard takedown rifles. It has a solid action with a receiver that can accommodate all calibers from 6.5x55mm up to the massive .458 Lott. Numerous options and calibers are available, including beautifully figured stocks of grade 4 Turkish walnut. MSRP can get up there, ranging from $6,333 to $10,607. For even more info, please visit sauer.de\/en<\/a>.<\/p>\n","post_title":"6 High-Quality Takedown Rifles for Easy Transport","post_excerpt":"","post_status":"publish","comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","post_password":"","post_name":"best-takedown-rifles","to_ping":"","pinged":"","post_modified":"2023-10-31 22:40:55","post_modified_gmt":"2023-11-01 02:40:55","post_content_filtered":"","post_parent":0,"guid":"https:\/\/www.dev.athlonoutdoors.com\/2015\/08\/26\/best-takedown-rifles\/","menu_order":0,"post_type":"post","post_mime_type":"","comment_count":"0","filter":"raw"},{"ID":109186,"post_author":"303","post_date":"2015-05-28 09:45:25","post_date_gmt":"2015-05-28 13:45:25","post_content":"\n\nOne of the greatest fallacies for those looking to upgrade or augment their home defense arsenal with a new long gun is the idea that you can\u2019t possibly defend your hearth and homestead without military-grade hardware, sophisticated optics and a 200-round drum magazine. Statistics, and reality, argue against that concept in terms of absolute requirements for repelling borders and defending castle walls. Do you typically need to blow off 200 rounds in a single in-home encounter or shoot the wings off a gnat at 300 yards? Nope. Do you really need to be lugging a 12-pound defensive package around the house? No again. So, what do you need?\n\nFirst off, as with any tool, look at the job the tool needs to do. Forget hordes of angry villagers with torches at the gates, or even herds of innocent zombies just out for a midnight snack. The statistical norm for a home \u201cattack\u201d is one or two people attempting to break in for one of three reasons: intoxication, anger or theft. These run anywhere from the drunk mistaking your home for somebody else\u2019s, the ex-boyfriend out for revenge, the classic (and random) middle-of-the-night burglar and the organized home invasion. With the exception of the more \u201ctargeted\u201d home invasion, most threats to the occupants are not particularly well thought out, not highly organized and not normally carried out by more than one or two hostiles. Most are close up, do not involve either extended timeframes or extended distances and do not burn up truckloads of ammunition.\n\nAn apartment dweller would rarely be shooting 300 yards in defense of wife and child, and the family living in a quiet suburban cul-de-sac is unlikely to need to shoot beyond the boundaries of either front yard or back fence. Obviously, the remote ranch house an hour from the nearest 911 response is a different matter, but for the majority of us, the home-defense rifle simply doesn\u2019t have to be a heavy, high-capacity, credit-card buster.\n\n\"lever-action, A tall gold bead like this Marbles Carbine Blade comes standard on some lever guns and can be ordered from Brownells.[\/caption]\n\nGiven all that, why do we even want a rifle in the first place? There are several reasons\u2014a rifle tends to be more powerful than a handgun (even when firing handgun ammunition because of velocity gains through longer barrels), it\u2019s frequently easier for many to shoot well at varying distances than a handgun, it extends the practical range over a handgun, it can be more intimidating to an intruder than the average handgun, and the right rifle can be relatively quick for even a non-gunnie to learn and operate effectively.\n\nRELATED STORY: 6 Manufacturers Selling Lever-Action Rifles For Home Defense Or Hunting<\/a><\/strong>\n\nIn choosing your rifle priority one is reliability. It has to function, should be simple to operate and should not be subject to ammo sensitivity against a wide range of brands and bullet types. Priority two is power, which should be in a \u201cserious\u201d caliber, such as .38 Special on up. And priority three, believe it or not, brings accuracy in last. It\u2019s nice to be able to hit a marauding gnat at 300 yards, but in most cases if your home-defense rifle can hold inside 4 inches at 100 yards, it\u2019ll be good enough.\n\nAll of this leads up, as you\u2019ve noticed, to the humble lever-action rifle as a candidate for your home-defense arsenal.\n\nThere\u2019s nothing wrong with the idea of a lever action, however archaic you perceive it to be. The repeating lever action rifle in many calibers, several models and multiple configurations was one of the original home-defense tools for much of the Western half of the U.S. for well over half a century, where it was just as effective in that role as it was in the hands of generations of hunters who brought home food for the table using it.\n\n\"lever-action, One of the advantages of a lever action is that you can tell at a glance if it\u2019s cocked or not.[\/caption]\n\nThe design is simple to learn: Fill it up through the loading gate, work the lever to chamber a round, cock the hammer, pull the trigger to fire, repeat as necessary. No separate magazines to lose or have fail to seat completely, no complicated controls to remember, no scope to knock loose, fog, or blur out at inside-the-house distances, no dead batteries, and less chance of \u201cspray-and-pray\u201d shooting as opposed to the average semi-auto like an AK-47 or AR-15.\n\nMagazine capacity, of course, is much less, but six to 10 rounds in a lever gun should easily handle 95 percent of the home-defense scenarios most of us are likely to encounter.\n\nWhich one should you choose? Look in your gun safe. You may already have what you need, whether it\u2019s Grandpa\u2019s old hand-me-down Winchester<\/a> in .30-30, a modern Browning BLR<\/a> in .308 Winchester, or even your Cowboy Action Shooting competition Marlin<\/a> or Uberti<\/a>. If not, evaluate your layout and decide whether you want the additional power and range for both indoor and outdoor applications of a centerfire rifle cartridge like the .30-30 or .308, or if a handgun caliber that\u2019ll be softer on the eardrums indoors while still easily carrying 50 or 75 yards outdoors would be a better choice.\n\nFor some, the utility of stockpiling one load for rifle and handgun, like the .357 Mag or .45 Colt, is a further consideration. For others, the ability of family members to tolerate recoil is a factor, and while I do recommend something heavier, in such cases the rimfires in .22 LR, .22 Mag and the hotter .17 calibers may be a better choice with no disconcerting recoil or extreme muzzle blast. My wife has two much-beloved Marlin 1894s<\/a> in .32-20 from her cowboy competition days. She knows them intimately, she shoots them better than anything else in the vault, and in her case, she\u2019d be far better off with her Marlins than with any of my tricked-out AR-15s if it came to somebody kicking our front door in.\n\nClose Quarters<\/strong>\n\n\"lever-action, \u201cShorter barrels can shoot every bit as accurately as longer barrels, and they maneuver infinitely better through tight confines\u2026 \u201d[\/caption]\n\nIndoor practicality dictates a short barrel. Shorter barrels can shoot every bit as accurately as longer barrels, and they maneuver infinitely better through tight confines and angles if you have to. The general recommendation in case of loud noises in the middle of the night is to congregate with a phone in one defensible location in the home while waiting for the sirens, but sometimes you have to do what you have to do, and a short, light, handy lever-action carbine just navigates easier all the way round than a longer barrel does. I do own Grandpa\u2019s old Winchester Model 94<\/a> in .30-30, and its 20-inch barrel is the longest I\u2019d go on a home-defense carbine by choice. I also have a 24-inch Marlin 1894 in .45 Colt that I could tolerate reasonably well, if it was all I had. Keep in mind that octagonal barrels will be heavier than round, and the shorter you go the less magazine capacity. There\u2019s no absolute, so buy what works best for you, or use what you already have if money\u2019s tight.\n\nRELATED STORY: Uberti\u2019s Silverboy Lever-Action Rifle in .22 LR<\/a><\/strong>\n\nLever action sights may not be outstanding, but they are typically usable as they come. The standard blade front\/notch rear is perfectly adequate for most shooters with decent eyesight out to 75 yards and farther, if necessary. Most can be easily adjusted out to 100 yards and used without expensive aftermarket products. If you do want refinements, an aperture rear can help with distances and a white-outline front blade, or a gold bead, can help line things up in darker lighting. Various methods of mounting scopes exist, with Marlins and Brownings being the easiest as they come pre-drilled and tapped for an optic. Indoors, a scope works against you and outdoors it can work for you, but it tends to slow down target acquisition. A good set of iron sights can put you right on target, right now, and that\u2019s important in close-up encounters.\n\nMost classic lever guns use under-barrel tube magazines, from the traditional side-loading Winchester to the \u201crimfire style\u201d on many .22 lever actions and on the Henry<\/a> rimfires and centerfires, where rounds are loaded through a port in the forward section of the magazine tube itself. The Browning BLR uses a detachable box magazine. In the most common home-defense context, there\u2019s no real advantage to any of these types since you\u2019re not looking at speed reloads anyway.\n\nIn the heavier calibers, consider a good recoil pad, if the new carbine doesn\u2019t already have one. The .30-30 is a fairly mild round for a rifle, but its stock design can punch a shoulder smartly with a solid steel or composite buttplate. Same with the .44 Mag caliber. You\u2019ll get more cooperation in learning and practice from family members if you reduce the \u201couch\u201d factor going in.\n\nThreat Takedown<\/strong>\n\n\"lever-action-rifles-7\"\n\nLearn how to work your home with your new lever gun once you make your choice. Take corners wide, where possible. Don\u2019t walk into a room or round a blind corner barrel-first\u2014you don\u2019t know who might be there to grab it. Don\u2019t round a close corner muzzle-up, it\u2019s too easy for an intruder to deflect the barrel or disarm you entirely. Navigate tight corners and doorways muzzle-down, making the gun harder to grab or deflect, and you can simply drop to one knee while pivoting the barrel up and firing if it is grabbed. Remember, the carbine can also make a very effective impact weapon, but make absolutely sure anybody using it understands whatever safety mechanism it may have. Simple, fast, light, reliable and affordable, the lever action still has a place.\n\nRELATED STORY: 15 New Guns and Accessories in the \"Old West\"<\/a><\/strong>","post_title":"Lifesaving Lever-Action Rifles For Home Defense","post_excerpt":"These classic lever-action rifles deliver reliable home-defense firepower when it matters most!","post_status":"publish","comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","post_password":"","post_name":"lifesaving-lever-action-rifles-for-home-defense","to_ping":"","pinged":"\nhttps:\/\/gunsoftheoldwest.com\/2015\/04\/15-new-guns-and-accessories-in-the-old-west\/","post_modified":"2023-05-31 12:06:26","post_modified_gmt":"2023-05-31 12:06:26","post_content_filtered":"","post_parent":0,"guid":"https:\/\/www.dev.athlonoutdoors.com\/2015\/05\/28\/lifesaving-lever-action-rifles-for-home-defense\/","menu_order":0,"post_type":"post","post_mime_type":"","comment_count":"0","filter":"raw"},{"ID":109242,"post_author":"303","post_date":"2015-05-25 09:00:37","post_date_gmt":"2015-05-25 13:00:37","post_content":"\n\nThe lever-action rifle is alive and doing quite well among both domestic and foreign makers, and there\u2019s a wide field to choose from in selecting one for home-defense use. Imagine what you want it to do before you go shopping around. The centerfire models will have a fair amount of crossover in serving both the home front and the hunting camp, if that\u2019s important to you, and you can obviously stretch your money farther by extending the dual utility of a true rifle caliber. The so-called pistol-caliber lever guns have the advantage of less recoil and ammunition commonality with handguns that might be in the house, and in any of the magnum calibers they\u2019re still no slouch. With practical ranges out to 150 yards and more in the hands of a good shooter, they can also easily handle both defense and hunting chores within their practical limitations. See the gallery above to learn about six manufacturers selling lever-action rifles.\n\n \n\nFor More Information<\/strong>\n\nWinchester\nhttp:\/\/www.winchesterguns.com<\/a>\n\nMarlin Firearms\nhttp:\/\/www.marlinfirearms.com<\/a>\n\nBrowning\nhttp:\/\/www.browning.com<\/a>\n\nHenry Repeating Arms\nhttp:\/\/www.henryrifles.com<\/a>\n\nMossberg\nhttp:\/\/www.mossberg.com<\/a>\n\nRossi USA\nhttp:\/\/www.rossiusa.com<\/a>\n\n \n\nRelated Stories<\/strong>\n\n4 New Old West Guns For 2015<\/a>\n\nNew For 2015: Browning AB3 Hunter Rifle<\/a>\n\nNew For 2015: Winchester XPR Bolt-Action Rifle<\/a>\n\nNew Sporting Rifles for 2014 | Varmint, Hunting & Long-Range Roundup<\/a>\n\nGun Review: Mossberg\u2019s Duck Commanders<\/a>","post_title":"6 Manufacturers Selling Lever-Action Rifles For Home Defense Or Hunting","post_excerpt":"There's a wide field of both domestic and foreign manufacturers offering lever-action rifles for home defense and hunting.","post_status":"publish","comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","post_password":"","post_name":"6-manufacturers-selling-lever-action-rifles-for-home-defense-or-hunting","to_ping":"","pinged":"https:\/\/www.personaldefenseworld.com\/2015\/04\/4-new-old-west-guns-for-2015\/#4-new-old-west-guns-for-2015\nhttps:\/\/www.personaldefenseworld.com\/2015\/02\/new-2015-browning-ab3-hunter-rifle\/\nhttps:\/\/www.personaldefenseworld.com\/2015\/01\/new-2015-winchester-xpr-bolt-action-rifle\/\nhttps:\/\/www.tactical-life.com\/firearms\/new-sporting-rifles-for-2014\/","post_modified":"2023-05-31 12:06:54","post_modified_gmt":"2023-05-31 12:06:54","post_content_filtered":"","post_parent":0,"guid":"https:\/\/www.dev.athlonoutdoors.com\/2015\/05\/25\/6-manufacturers-selling-lever-action-rifles-for-home-defense-or-hunting\/","menu_order":0,"post_type":"post","post_mime_type":"","comment_count":"0","filter":"raw"}],"next":false,"prev":true,"total_page":12},"paged":1,"column_class":"jeg_col_2o3","class":"jnews_block_23"};

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