Dropped Dragoon?

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ajbennettnc

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Got this Colt's Dragoon repro in an auction. Muzzle is slanted; I believe it must have fallen, maybe from a horse. I want to shoot it. Anybody got any ideas about whether this muzzle damage makes it dangerous to shoot? I figure it would need recrowning to make it accurate, but safety is the first concern. Thinking I could just saw it back a bit. The barrel isn't crooked, from what I can tell. Anybody have experience with muzzle damage like this on a percussion revolver? Thanks in advance for advice.
 

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Here's some other things to check, how does the wedge fit, tight or loose and floppy? Judging by the muzzle damage someone was either trying to get barrel off of it wasn't going back together and a don't force it get a bigger hammer frame of mind came into play. This pistol is most likely a Uberti but if it isn't it will most likely ...98% positive.. the arbor is short and possibly loose or out of square with the frame. A tip on getting the barrel off, grab the barrel in one hand and whack the cylinder with a PLASTIC mallet a few times. It should start to move. Did I mention the wedge needs to be out? PM me if you have any questions about having work done on this pistol.
 
Here's some other things to check, how does the wedge fit, tight or loose and floppy? Judging by the muzzle damage someone was either trying to get barrel off of it wasn't going back together and a don't force it get a bigger hammer frame of mind came into play. This pistol is most likely a Uberti but if it isn't it will most likely ...98% positive.. the arbor is short and possibly loose or out of square with the frame. A tip on getting the barrel off, grab the barrel in one hand and whack the cylinder with a PLASTIC mallet a few times. It should start to move. Did I mention the wedge needs to be out? PM me if you have any questions about having work done on this pistol.
Yep, I think there were only two makers. Uberti or ASM. I could be wrong buts thats all I've seen. I have an ASM 1st model and the 2nd - 3rd are Uberti as is my Whitneyville.
 
My guess is someone who shouldn't own a hammer did it while pounding out a stuck ball. YMMV
my first thought was there are people who shouldn't get nourishment.
without better pictures and a new pair of eyes to see them, It looks like maybe it could be fixed by a 1/4 inch amputation and re-crown.
 
You can true it up relatively simply. Ive used the Lee case trimmer guides, find one close enough to your bore that it can be turned down (can probably get by with a drill press and file/sandpaper) to just slip into the bore, attach the cutter. Use black sharpie to dye the muzzle, insert guide and cutter. Only gently turn the cutter to indicate where its high, carefully file, recheck until square. The crown on many was very nearly non-existent, but you can crown it by several methods. If the bore is affected, it will have to be cleaned up first to allow the bore diameter pilot to slip in. The outside can be cleaned up to look good.

Ive cut rifle barrels down with this method, it works reasonably well.
 
Yep, I think there were only two makers. Uberti or ASM. I could be wrong buts thats all I've seen. I have an ASM 1st model and the 2nd - 3rd are Uberti as is my Whitneyville.
So far I've worked on Uberti, ASM and Armi San Paolo Walkers. Also seen one or two from Palmetto but they might be just an importer. Quality runs from from really good to pretty awful. Every one had a short arbor.
 
Got this Colt's Dragoon repro in an auction. Muzzle is slanted; I believe it must have fallen, maybe from a horse. I want to shoot it. Anybody got any ideas about whether this muzzle damage makes it dangerous to shoot? I figure it would need recrowning to make it accurate, but safety is the first concern. Thinking I could just saw it back a bit. The barrel isn't crooked, from what I can tell. Anybody have experience with muzzle damage list this on a percussion revolver? Thanks in advance for advice.
I'd pull the loading rod, chuck it in my lathe head stock, dial indicate the bore and turn a new crown. It can be done just as well in a padded vice with fine tooth mill file and a bore square and spotting fluid. It should also be checked with a plug gauge of proper diameter to detect any bore diameter inconsistency.
 
If it was mine I would take it and shoot it some. It may be just fine and you can just file the mushroom off. If it won't shoot well then you can try to fix things better. Or hang it on the wall or just give it to someone you don't like.
I'd give it a home ! It will need re-crowned as from the picture I'm sure the bore is distorted at the crown and the barrel may be bent.
I'm thinking it may have come out of some ones holster while mounted and hit end on a big rock!
 
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