New Ruger Old Army – Need help dialing in

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That's what I figured . . .

One thing this place doesn't lack is attitude.
I am waiting for you to help me "grasp HOW the open-top platform works" and educate me "just how genius of a design it really is". I'm just a lowly former engineer, Please finish what you started. Who, knows, you may win me over and help me understand. Thanks! :)
 
I am waiting for you to help me "grasp HOW the open-top platform works" and educate me "just how genius of a design it really is". I'm just a lowly former engineer, Please finish what you started. Who, knows, you may win me over and help me understand. Thanks! :)
Well, not looking for "converts", didn't say you were a "lowly" engineer, i didn't "start" anything. You said the lack of a top strap bothered you (that's what tipped me off that you didn't "fully" understand the design). I figured you would "appreciate" it once you thought about it.
They had Mechanical engineers in the 1830's /40's that were extremely clever and intelligent as well. It's THEIR design that allows me to operate a copy of their design made with modern materials that can surpass many "top strap" designs (seemingly to the "upset" of many).
In short, i regularly shoot +p ammo in my cartridge converted open-top platform revolvers. A pair of '60's in 45acp and 45C in a pair of Dragoons.
The search function here will get your info.

Mike
 
Thanks Mike, but I still don't understand the genius of the design, unless you are referring to the limitations of the manufacturing processes of the period. I was hoping you could help me understand. Thanks.
 
I am on board with Mike on the open top design. If the pistol is set up properly its a very strong platform, more so than the Remington. You have contact with bottom of the arbor socket, the frame area where the wedge fits, the slot where the wedge fits and the two pins and frame area at the bottom of the frame and barrel lug. As long as those places are fitted and kept tight you have a 2 piece unit behaving like it's one chunk of metal. Mike has been shooting +P 45 ACP loads in his guns for a little while now with no problems. For those who are hung up on the Remington top strap being the stronger design take a look at the area where the loading ram goes through the frame and look at the top strap where the sight groove is milled out. Those areas don't look real stout to me.
 
Thanks Mike, but I still don't understand the genius of the design, unless you are referring to the limitations of the manufacturing processes of the period. I was hoping you could help me understand. Thanks.

The "compactness" of the frame (the arbor IS the "top strap") along with the size of the pieces involved lend much to the strength of the platform rather than the frame being a "perimeter" fully around the cylinder. The arbor fully seated against the bottom of the arbor hole (in the barrel lug) under tension from the wedge "driven" in to impart and maintain such. This gives a rigid assemblage of the two which now depend on the arbor being screwed into the frame.
If there is a space between the arbor end and the bottom of the arbor hole, the wedge becomes a loose "pin" between two assemblies with opposite forces acting on it (which will eventually need replacing because of).

All of my +p rounds (23Kpsi in 45acp or 45C) use jacketed bullets (230gr for acp's, 250gr. for 45C).
The wedges in all of them are perfect with a minimum round count in the '60's of 2,000.

Mike
 
By the way, the end of the arbor contacting the bottom of the arbor hole is what determines the "endshake" (barrel / cylinder "gap").
The fact that ALL makers of these reproduction revolvers left out that impotent little detail ( Pietta saw fit to correct that a dozen yrs ago) is why they have been thought of the way they have been.
The platform, executed as per design, makes quite a bit of difference!!.

Mike
 
Thank you for the detailed explanation, it helps me appreciate the design. I never owned or disassembled one so I never gave it much thought. It is a great design, revolutionary at the time, relatively easy to manufacture with tooling of the period, made Sam very wealthy. As a modern gun guy new to blackpower, seeing the arbor carry the entire load vs the frame sharing the load top and bottom just didn’t “feel” as good. Feelings can be dangerous, maybe I should keep them to myself! 😆
 
Thank you for the detailed explanation, it helps me appreciate the design. I never owned or disassembled one so I never gave it much thought. It is a great design, revolutionary at the time, relatively easy to manufacture with tooling of the period, made Sam very wealthy. As a modern gun guy new to blackpower, seeing the arbor carry the entire load vs the frame sharing the load top and bottom just didn’t “feel” as good. Feelings can be dangerous, maybe I should keep them to myself! 😆
Well, I figured someone with an engineering background would be able to "see" what happens when explained. The "genius" is the way the forces generated are delt with by the design. The "joining" of the two assemblies "done correctly" vs "incorrectly" makes all the difference. Admittedly, a top strap design makes total economical sense (make a frame - screw in a barrel . . . ) but an exaggerated top strap is needed as you increase the energy of the ammo . . . not to mention the smaller diameter of the base-pin keeps overall size manageable.
Don't keep your feelings to yourself!!
😃
We all need to keep learning !! (feelings just get in the way sometimes!!)

Mike
 
I think it was Mike that said modern Pietta copies of the Colt SAA are weaker then the open tops that he shoots but the replica SAA which is really a weak design many are chambered in 357 mag at 44,000 PSI where Mike is shooting 23K PSI. I doubt any open top could handle 44K PSI
 
I think it was Mike that said modern Pietta copies of the Colt SAA are weaker then the open tops that he shoots but the replica SAA which is really a weak design many are chambered in 357 mag at 44,000 PSI where Mike is shooting 23K PSI. I doubt any open top could handle 44K PSI
Yap, you gotta compare apples to apples. I'm shooting .452" bullets not .357". Holes in the .45C cylinder and barrel are bigger than the same setup with .357 holes. More material means more strength. I belive Blackhawk Ruger onlys top out in the middle 30K psi. range.
I've listed in several threads a number of currently made SAA copies that won't hold up to 45acp+p/ 45C +p (both 23Kpsi) ammo and yes, even my own Pietta Frontier . . . and yes my '60's and Dragoons handle it with ease. Never said you can shoot 30K, much less 44K!!! Why not just say 60K 454 pressures?
A .22 long rifle round runs around 24K, bullet size makes a difference . . .

Mike
 
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I think it was Mike that said modern Pietta copies of the Colt SAA are weaker then the open tops that he shoots but the replica SAA which is really a weak design many are chambered in 357 mag at 44,000 PSI where Mike is shooting 23K PSI. I doubt any open top could handle 44K PSI
Oh, btw, in that "caliber" an open-top could definitely handle it. Walt and I have talked many times about a 44Mag on a Dragoon platform. . .
And yes, I had to "make" headspace clearance to allow the 45C cylinder to function (again) after I fired just five 45acp +p's in my "wonderful" Pietta Frontier.
Mike
 
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Yap, you gotta compare apples to apples. I'm shooting .452" bullets not .357". Holes in the .45C cylinder and barrel are bigger than the same setup with .357 holes. More material means more strength. I belive Blackhawk Ruger onlys top out in the middle 30K psi. range.
I've listed in several threads a number of currently made SAA copies that won't hold up to 45acp+p/ 45C +p (both 23Kpsi) ammo and yes, even my own Pietta Frontier . . . and yes my '60's and Dragoons handle it with ease. Never said you can shoot 30K, much less 44K!!! Why not just say 60K 454 pressures?
A .22 long rifle round runs around 24K, bullet size makes a difference . . .

Mike
I always saw the bigger the bore the lower the pressure with top loads. so a 45 with hot not maximum load will run lower pressure then a 357 with hot loads. I just listed 44k PSI is what a 357 runs at maximum as the industry states
 
Oh, btw, in that "caliber" an open-top could definitely handle it. Walt and I have talked many times about a 44Mag on a Dragoon platform. . .

Mike
you are comparing giant open tops like the walker and dragoon to the weak junk colt SAA which in 357 can handle 44K PSI. this would mean you must compare your open tops to a ruger super redhawk
 
Blackhawk sight installed, looks good, height calculates to be right, and I really like the serrations on the ramp. Now I need some better weather to try it!

Thanks guys!!!

IMG_0526.JPG
 
you are comparing giant open tops like the walker and dragoon to the weak junk colt SAA which in 357 can handle 44K PSI. this would mean you must compare your open tops to a ruger super redhawk
Nope, I'm not.
The Navy /Army frame is the SAME frame size as the the SAA!!! (and the open-top wins!!!!!).
I just made a statement that Walt and myself have discussed on several occasions the possibility of a Dragoon in 44Mag !!!! Concentrate!!

Mike
 
I always saw the bigger the bore the lower the pressure with top loads. so a 45 with hot not maximum load will run lower pressure then a 357 with hot loads. I just listed 44k PSI is what a 357 runs at maximum as the industry states
But -
. . . where Mike is shooting 23K PSI. I doubt any open top could handle 44K PSI

Hmmmmmm . . . back pedal much?!

Mike
 
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