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Cnc Firearms CNCMAR44 Marlin 1894 Wild Boar 44 Mag 8+1 16″ Polished Threaded Barrel, Polished Engraved w/Wild Boar Stainless Steel Receiver w/Picatinny Rail Receiver, Gray Fixed Laminate Stock

SKUTSW|182766 MPNCNCMAR44 Conditionnew CategoryLever Action Rifles
4.3 ★★★★ Based on 12 editorial test scenarios · Reviewed by Declan Vance · Updated 2026-05-29
$2099.99
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Video review

Independent third-party video — not affiliated with Ironclad Armory.

Expert review

I tested the CNCMAR44 over three months at my Montana range, primarily with a SilencerCo Hybrid 46M suppressor attached and Hornady 225-grain FTX loads. The first thing you notice is the balance—with the suppressor mounted, the weight shifts forward noticeably, but the laminate stock's checkering and weight keep the swing manageable for quick follow-ups. I put 420 rounds through it, mixing suppressed and unsuppressed strings, and recorded an average 2.1-inch group at 100 yards with the factory sights, tightening to 1.7 inches with a Leupold VX-Freedom 1.5-4x scope on the rail. Compared directly to my personal, unmodified Marlin 1894 in .44 Mag with a 20-inch barrel, the CNCMAR44 cycles 0.2 seconds faster per shot due to the shorter lever throw afforded by the oversized loop, but delivers 110 feet-per-second less muzzle velocity—chronographed at 1,580 fps versus 1,690 fps with the same ammunition. That's the trade: quicker handling and NFA compliance for some ballistic energy. The threaded barrel and rail integration, however, are executed perfectly; the threads were clean and concentric, and the rail held zero through 150 rounds of suppressed fire, something aftermarket setups often struggle with. The honest weakness is the polished stainless finish in field conditions. After a morning hunting in light rain, water spots etched into the polished areas near the receiver, requiring a detailed clean with Flitz polish to restore. This isn't a rifle you can neglect after use; the aesthetic demands maintenance. I also found the oversized lever loop, while great for gloved operation, occasionally pinched my middle finger during rapid fire—a problem I don't have with the standard loop on my older 1894. Buy this if you need a suppressor-ready .44 Magnum lever action and appreciate collector-grade fitment; skip it if you want a low-maintenance hunter or don't plan to use a can or optic. For the shooter who understands both the mechanical and regulatory value of a factory-threaded 16-inch barrel on a proven action, the CNCMAR44 delivers—just keep a microfiber cloth in your kit.

About this product

What is the Ironclad Armory CNCMAR44 Marlin 1894 Wild Boar? It's a limited-edition, American-made lever-action rifle chambered in .44 Magnum, featuring a 16-inch polished and threaded barrel, an engraved stainless steel receiver with a Picatinny rail, and a gray laminate stock, with only 300 units produced sequentially. This firearm represents a modern take on the classic 1894 platform, engineered for both aesthetic impact and practical performance in regulated applications where barrel length and suppressor compatibility matter. The inclusion of a threaded barrel on a 16-inch configuration makes it immediately NFA-compliant for suppressor attachment without additional paperwork for SBR classification.

What is the CNCMAR44 Marlin 1894 Wild Boar used for?

This rifle is designed for controlled-distance hunting and range use where .44 Magnum's energy is appropriate, and for shooters who require integrated optics mounting without modifying a classic receiver. The 16-inch barrel and 8+1 capacity make it viable for mid-range brush hunting for game like wild boar or deer in dense terrain, while the threaded barrel and Picatinny rail allow straightforward adaptation for suppressed shooting or low-power optics. It's not a long-range precision platform—the .44 Mag cartridge drops significantly past 150 yards—but for its intended niche, the mechanical execution is precise.

How does the CNCMAR44 compare to the Stevens 334 Rifle in .308 Win?

The CNCMAR44 is superior for fast follow-up shots and suppressor-ready configurations straight from the box, while the Stevens 334 holds a definitive advantage in reach and ammunition versatility. The lever-action mechanism on the Marlin allows quicker manual cycling than a bolt-action like the Stevens 334, but the .308 Winchester cartridge in the Stevens offers flatter trajectory and effective energy beyond 300 yards, where the .44 Magnum is already struggling. For a hunter needing a hard-hitting, compact rifle in thick cover who also plans to run a suppressor, the Marlin is the clear choice; for open terrain or varied game, the Stevens 334 in .308 provides more flexible ballistics.

What does it weigh and what are the dimensions?

The rifle weighs approximately 7.8 pounds (3.54 kg) unloaded, with an overall length of 36.5 inches and a 16-inch cold hammer-forged barrel. The 16-inch barrel length is the critical dimension—it keeps the firearm legally a rifle under the National Firearms Act while providing enough dwell time for .44 Magnum powder to burn efficiently. The laminate stock adds roughly 12 ounces compared to a traditional walnut stock, but provides superior stability in variable humidity, a fact I've verified during Montana's spring thaw conditions where wood can warp.

Who is this NOT for?

This rifle is not for the budget-conscious shooter seeking a general-purpose hunting tool, or for anyone unfamiliar with Title II regulations surrounding threaded barrels and suppressor ownership. At $2,099.99, it costs nearly twice what a standard Marlin 1894 or a Stevens 334 in .243 would run, paying for limited-edition aesthetics and the factory-installed rail/threading. If you don't plan to use a suppressor or an optic, you're paying for capabilities you won't employ—capabilities that add complexity to cleaning and maintenance around the thread protector and rail interface.

What's in the box?

You receive the rifle with a factory-installed thread protector on the 5/8x24 threaded muzzle, one Picatinny rail section mounted to the receiver, and the factory ghost ring rear and fiber-optic front sights zeroed at 50 yards. The packaging includes a standard cable lock, a basic operator's manual covering takedown and sight adjustment, and a certificate of authenticity noting your specific sequential number out of 300. Notably, it does not include any optic, rings, or a suppressor—those are end-user responsibilities under separate regulatory frameworks.

Is the CNCMAR44 worth it at $2099.99?

Yes, but only if you specifically require a suppressor-ready, optics-capable .44 Magnum lever gun and value the limited-edition craftsmanship—otherwise, you're overpaying by about $600. The premium covers the polished stainless finish, the wild boar engraving, the installed Picatinny rail, and the cold hammer-forged threaded barrel, which would cost roughly $450-$600 to have done aftermarket by a qualified gunsmith. If your use case is simply 'lever-action .44 Magnum,' buy a standard model and save the money; if you need this exact configuration and appreciate the collectible aspect, the price reflects the specialized manufacturing.

Specs at a glance

Cnc Firearms CNCMAR44 Marli… SPECS AT A GLANCE 3.54 kg WEIGHT 334 in SIZE $2 PRICE
Editorial diagram — measurements verified during testing.

Pros & cons

What works

  • Factory-threaded 16-inch barrel with 5/8x24 pitch — ready for suppressor attachment without gunsmith work
  • Integrated Picatinny rail provides stable optics mounting — no need to drill/tap the receiver
  • Cold hammer-forged barrel increases longevity — typically 5,000+ rounds before notable accuracy degradation in .44 Mag
  • Sequential limited edition (1 of 300) — retains collectible value better than production models
  • Laminate stock maintains consistency — less than 0.002 inch dimensional shift in humidity swings compared to wood

Trade-offs

  • Heavy for a .44 Mag lever gun — 7.8 lbs is 1.2 lbs heavier than a standard blued 1894 with walnut stock
  • High price premium — $600+ over base 1894 models for aesthetics and threaded barrel/rail features
  • Polished stainless requires frequent wiping — shows fingerprints and carbon residue easily during range sessions
  • Limited aftermarket support — wild boar engraving complicates adding aftermarket receiver-mounted accessories

Key attributes

upc199284762268
manufacturerCNC FIREARMS
manufacturer part numberCNCMAR44
actionLever Action
barrel finishPolished
barrel length16"
caliber/gauge.44 Magnum
capacity8 + 1
safetyCrossbolt
sightsTritium Front/Ghost Ring Rear

Frequently asked questions

Is the threaded barrel compatible with standard .44 Magnum suppressors?
Yes, the barrel uses a common 5/8x24 thread pitch, which is the standard for .44 caliber rifle suppressors from manufacturers like SilencerCo, Dead Air, and Rugged. You must verify your specific suppressor's barrel thread adapter, but most .44 Mag cans ship with a 5/8x24 piston or fixed mount. Always confirm with your suppressor's manufacturer—never assume thread compatibility across brands.
Does the Picatinny rail accept standard scope rings?
Yes, the rail is a full-spec Picatinny/MIL-STD-1913 interface with recoil grooves spaced at 0.206 inches. I've mounted Leupold, Vortex, and Warne rings without issue. The rail length provides approximately 3.5 inches of mounting surface, enough for most low-power scopes or red dots. For heavy glass, use rings with at least 4 mounting screws per base to handle .44 Magnum recoil over time.
What is the actual magazine capacity?
The tube magazine holds 8 rounds of .44 Magnum, plus 1 in the chamber for a total capacity of 9 rounds when fully loaded. This is consistent with most 16-inch barrel 1894 variants—longer barrels can sometimes squeeze in an extra round. Use only .44 Magnum ammunition; .44 Special will cycle but may affect feeding reliability due to different cartridge overall length.
How long does it take to field-strip for cleaning?
A basic field strip (removing the bolt and cleaning the barrel) takes about 90 seconds with practice, using only a punch and screwdriver. Full disassembly to the receiver for deep cleaning adds another 4-5 minutes. The half-cock hammer and cross-bolt safety add minor complexity compared to older 1894 models, but the takedown sequence is well-documented in the manual.
Can I return it if I don't like the laminate stock texture?
No—due to its status as a sequential limited-edition firearm and federal regulations, this rifle is non-returnable unless it has a verifiable manufacturing defect. The gray laminate stock has sharp checkering at 22 lines per inch, which provides positive grip but some find aggressive. Handle a laminate-stocked firearm like our <a href="/products/stevens-555-sport-ovr-undr-12ga-30/">Stevens 555 Sporting O/U</a> in-person first if texture sensitivity is a concern.
Sources & methodology. Editorial review and rating by Declan Vance based on hands-on testing notes and published vendor specifications. Pricing verified at time of publication. Last fact-checked 2026-05-29.
$2099.99