Pigoutultra
Member
I was thinking about how it would be awesome for a lever-action gun to be chambered for a .45-70 necked down to .35 caliber, but since all of those are wildcats it would be difficult to get ammo. Then it dawned on me that the .350 Remington Magnum is almost like that. It has the same characteristics of a .45-70 necked down to .35 only it is closer to a .450 Marlin necked down. Since it has the same case head dimensions as the .450 Marlin, it must be easy to covert to it. The only issue I can think of is OAL, but if it is possible to rechamber a .45-70 to .450 Alaskan which is based on the .348 Winchester, having a OAL greater than the .350 Remington Magnum, then there shouldn't be a problem. Any thoughts?