paulvallandigham said:I understand, Jim. And, its a good idea. But without actually seeing the nipple, I would not recommend doing this first. I just have had too many troubles with original CVA nipples, and, apparently those problems persist with some of the imported guns still made. I think an "after-market" nipple, like the treso, or spitfire, or hot shot, is going to give more reliable service. I have been using stainless steel nipples now for years in my guns without complaint. One of these days, I am going to buy some of those expensive Bronze/Berylium alloy nipples, and hopefully never have to buy another nipple again.
My first rifle would not fire a cap until it was struck a second time. The gun, and nipple came from a manufacturer in Spain. I found that the nipple did not align with the face of the hammer, and "solved" the problem as I recommended above. As soon as I could get to the next shoot at Friendship, I bought a couple of replacement nipples made of stainless steel, and the consistency of ignition improved immediately.
MY groups fired from the bench shrunk in half! What I thought was a good noise maker, and a so-so plinking gun, became a highly accurate little .45 rifle, that won lots of shoots, and prizes.
Testing the contact between the face of the hammer and the top of the nipple is very easy and quick to do. If the test shows full contact, Then go ahead and file down the barrel of the nipple to fit the small caps. :hatsoff:
GoodCheer said:This is an "if", just a what-if.
Sometimes when a hammer cup rubs on the cap on the way down it will fire on the second try. And, the tougher the cap material the more resistance the hammer gets. Tough brass like on the CVA caps more so than on thin soft copper caps like RWS.
So, what if. There could be some misalignment that's not totally obvious. I've suffered through that with two pieces (a Zouave and a GPR)so thought it might be worth mentioning.
Swampy said:GoodCheer said:This is an "if", just a what-if.
Sometimes when a hammer cup rubs on the cap on the way down it will fire on the second try. And, the tougher the cap material the more resistance the hammer gets. Tough brass like on the CVA caps more so than on thin soft copper caps like RWS.
So, what if. There could be some misalignment that's not totally obvious. I've suffered through that with two pieces (a Zouave and a GPR)so thought it might be worth mentioning.
Did you try Paul V trick witht the lipestick?
Are you saying the RWS will fire first time and the CVA's need a second cocking and will fire then most of the time?
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