Waf150187 wrote:cheers for the reply fellas,
it is gone completely, the places in the U.S that have them dont ship to aus and the ones that do ship dont make them or dont have them
from what i can find it is similar to the picture have also asked us to purchase a detailed picture with dimensions with no luck unfortunately
the gunsmith says it'll be an easy enough process to make one but its time consuming (time=money) so what they sell them for in us is waaaay cheaper than getting one made
Being a firearm part you would require a B709 permit to import it anyway, but for US sellers to export it I think they need an export licence, which most won't want to bother with. If you can organise one in the US you could fly there with a B709 and collect it yourself. As it is not actually a restricted part in Australia (as far as I'm aware anybody can own a rifle striker) if you know somebody making the trip they could collect it for you, though I think they would need to be listed on the B709 as your agent, you'd have to check that with Border Force.
I really can't see that taking more than an hour or two for any vaguely competent metalworker to fabricate, even less if they had one to work from. You can have a go yourself if you want to. Measure the width of the channel it runs in and order/find a piece of steel slightly thicker than that, and some nice files. If you want to prototype it first use aluminium, I find it easier/quicker to work with, though even plywood would work for this.
The price will depend on your reason for wanting to replace it. If you want to be able to take the rifle shooting then the couple hundred dollars spent buys you that, which may well be worth it. If you just want it shootable so you can sell it, then probably not.
I would be looking for forums (and Faebook groups) for collectors of old Marlins, old .22's, etc and see if you can make contact with a larger group of people with a similar interest, that way you might manage to find the part somewhere in the world.