- Joined
- Aug 4, 2019
Cool as fuck! Please do post about it once you've gotten some rounds downrange with it.I went into the shop for ammo and ended up scoring a colt sp1 parts kit for 800 bucks. Building it rn
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Cool as fuck! Please do post about it once you've gotten some rounds downrange with it.I went into the shop for ammo and ended up scoring a colt sp1 parts kit for 800 bucks. Building it rn
Buy it anyway. They're fun as fuck to play with, and cheaper than the day is long. You can search "wall hanger gun" on the internet and find stacks of em for like $50 bucks.Just left Sarco. Amazing I still have a working card in my wallet. Actually blew my fun money last night taking Mrs to hockey game and suite.
Place is a firearm mecca, if anyone is every near by do stop. Super staff and fun to poke around. I was here as Mrs basso's v day gift to me.
I don't know why but I wanted one of those little h&r top break in 32 s&w just to have.
Why?Concept for a Minimalist Upper with integral RMR mount
That checks out.by some guy on reddit
marlin has better quality control. S&W revolvers are hit and miss.Lever gun woes strike again.
So, all set on the Marlin 1894 in .357, then S&W drops the 1854 in .44 mag. No problem, it's Marlin time anyway. However.... Smith unusually made the stainless threaded barrel and larger lever loop STANDARD.
In S&W land, you pay MORE for bluing and a "classic" look.
In Marlin land..... Bend over for that stainless if we even make it in the caliber you want.
It seems that S&W basically.... Copied the Henry action or at least design features with their 1854, which is fine by me.
So, wait for the Smith in .357 or get the Marlin now....?![]()
I love S&W. But Marlin. Marlin now. No discussion.Lever gun woes strike again.
So, all set on the Marlin 1894 in .357, then S&W drops the 1854 in .44 mag. No problem, it's Marlin time anyway. However.... Smith unusually made the stainless threaded barrel and larger lever loop STANDARD.
In S&W land, you pay MORE for bluing and a "classic" look.
In Marlin land..... Bend over for that stainless if we even make it in the caliber you want.
It seems that S&W basically.... Copied the Henry action or at least design features with their 1854, which is fine by me.
So, wait for the Smith in .357 or get the Marlin now....?![]()
Back in ye-olden days, they converted flintlocks to percussion by similar, granted more primitive, methods(see the 1816 conversions). I've seen percussions converted to flintlock before, and I assume they've done the same since they retained the original barrel.C: Find a bolt that fits and plugs the thing up, screw it in, cut it flush, weld over the top to seal this, then drill my own touch hole and tap it on the side.
Don't know if anyone has done something similar and can advise.
what bore is it?Here's where the nipple used to be.
Have a couple options. I can either A: Leave it as percussion, clean the thread, add a new nipple or nipple/drum combo.
B: Attach a flintlock lock, and angle it so it will interact after finding a touchhole liner matching the threads.
C: Find a bolt that fits and plugs the thing up, screw it in, cut it flush, weld over the top to seal this, then drill my own touch hole and tap it on the side.
Don't know if anyone has done something similar and can advise.
I just hate seeing old guns become wall hangers. My aunt in law's house drives me crazy because she collects old cowboy guns for the aesthetic, and every time I go in I'm like, "Hey, you know I could fix that colt thunderer. They're nice. Or that vintage marlin. Or the Krag. Or the kentucky rifle. Or the 1800's SAAs over your fireplace. Fuck shit, I'll do it for free, PLEASE LET ME FIX THOSE FUCKING GUNS." She's scatterbrained so it's always, "Oh you could? Okay, remind me the next time you're here!"
Good to hear it's not as dumb as I think. And I assume it's a later 1800s, or high end, as it appears to have really pretty filligree everywhere, and only the first 5 inches of barrel is hexagonal, then it turns into a standard smooth barrel. Hard to find info, as GB listing was what I look for on eBay and online sellers, which is "old percussion rifle, parts or wall hanger"Back in ye-olden days, they converted flintlocks to percussion by similar, granted more primitive, methods(see the 1816 conversions). I've seen percussions converted to flintlock before, and I assume they've done the same since they retained the original barrel.
My only worry in the process is the integrity of the material around the plug and that it's a really ratted out hexagonal barrel. If I had to do it, I would drill a wider hole, tap it, and make sure to get the depth for the bolt just right. Not sure about welding as I've never done it on a barrel, but otherwise you have a pretty solid plan.
What a fucking excellent question, I don't know, haha. The title is as above, and the description is "old percussion rifle, parts or wall hanger, poor shape, london stamped on barrel, 30 inch barrel"what bore is it?
let us know if it is a .45 with hexagonal rifling. small bore target rifles were very popular in the long range scene back then. they would shoot those rifles out to 1,000 yards. the most famous of these is the whitworth rifle, which was used by Confederate sharpshooters in the civil war to deadly effect at long ranges, but they were offered by most every higher end maker or arms like John rigby and so on. I believe Rigby won the inaugural shoot at the creedmore range using a .451 caliber muzzle loader against more modern single shot rifles.What a fucking excellent question, I don't know, haha. The title is as above, and the description is "old percussion rifle, parts or wall hanger, poor shape, london stamped on barrel, 30 inch barrel"
You don't have to buy a whole new buffer if you need to go up a size. KAK sells individual tungsten buffer weights at around $10, it's not that hard to swap the weights. H1 is one tungsten weight while H3 is three, all you have to do is knock out a roll pin and replace.I tried out pairing a 20 inch upper with an H2 buffer.
Felt over gassed lol.
Though looking online.
The buffer under H3 sold by PWS, has a weight of 5.1 oz. Which is the closest identical to a standard M16 recoil buffer of 5.2 oz. A standard H3 buffer is 5.6 oz.
not bad. the SIG Romeo is a cut above the bushnell red dots, which aren't terrible and are adequate for general use. decent battery life and size too.How's this for this discount?
conventional 20" rifle uppers with a rifle gas system that want to use the carbine stock just use the standard 3oz carbine buffer and receiver extension, so i'm not sure how the H2 felt "overgassed" unless you have something non-standard. a carbine buffer and extension will not work reliably for an MG in automatic due to lock time issues and possible bolt bounce, and to get it working will need a slightly beefier action spring, but this will not matter for a semi-auto.I tried out pairing a 20 inch upper with an H2 buffer.
At least you know it's not an especially cheap cheap barrel, half-round was generally an extra or by-request option for the longest time.and only the first 5 inches of barrel is hexagonal, then it turns into a standard smooth barrel.
You don't have to buy a whole new buffer if you need to go up a size. KAK sells individual tungsten buffer weights at around $10, it's not that hard to swap the weights. H1 is one tungsten weight while H3 is three, all you have to do is knock out a roll pin and replace.
Also check your ejector and extractor, sometimes it can cause issues that look gas related if they're damaged or out of spec.
If you're still running into that issue and there's no issue with your bolt the only other things I can think of to resolve it would be going up to an A5 buffer system to add more weights or buying a ez tune gas tube and fix the gassing issue closer to the source.
not bad. the SIG Romeo is a cut above the bushnell red dots, which aren't terrible and are adequate for general use. decent battery life and size too.
conventional 20" rifle uppers with a rifle gas system that want to use the carbine stock just use the standard 3oz carbine buffer and receiver extension, so i'm not sure how the H2 felt "overgassed" unless you have something non-standard. a carbine buffer and extension will not work reliably for an MG in automatic due to lock time issues and possible bolt bounce, and to get it working will need a slightly beefier action spring, but this will not matter for a semi-auto.
uses the H2, yes, however it isn't reliable in automatic, generally speaking because it's not balanced for a rifle length gas system and creates too little dwell time when the bolt is constantly cycling - the light weight moves too quickly and allows the bolt to move too fast, which can induce a bouncing effect during locking. the rifle gas system is designed for a 5oz (not including the very early XM16 buffer assembly), the H2 is 4.6oz, the H3 is 5.4oz. if you are not firing in automatic, the buffer weight is nearly irrelevant because your finger is unlikely to be faster than the cycling time of the action consistently.read up that the C7A2
2-3 o'clock is definitely unusual - it implies too much gas in the system, too light of a bolt or spring or buffer, too large a gas port, gas port location is too close to the breach, gas system is nonstandard/abnormal in some way, et c. Colt has made a lot of uppers over the years. if you have an assembly number or SKU that can help narrow it down. the T series for example has larger than normal gas ports (0.0995" iirc) designed for light varminting/target rounds for example.The 5.56 would eject between 2:00 to 3:00 and the 223 would eject 3:00 to 4:00.
The upper in question is a 20 inch Colt. And the BCG is from BCM.
Post civil war, didn't they do the same with 45-70? Because 45-70 can reach out 1000 yards if you have the right sights to calculate the drop.let us know if it is a .45 with hexagonal rifling. small bore target rifles were very popular in the long range scene back then. they would shoot those rifles out to 1,000 yards. the most famous of these is the whitworth rifle, which was used by Confederate sharpshooters in the civil war to deadly effect at long ranges, but they were offered by most every higher end maker or arms like John rigby and so on. I believe Rigby won the inaugural shoot at the creedmore range using a .451 caliber muzzle loader against more modern single shot rifles.
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