Hello, during Covid I got into revolvers, namely open top 1872 Unbertis (2 of them), and a rehabbed Uberti 1873. It had a locked action, sold as a gunsmith special. After a new hammer, trigger, spring, hand and bolt, it worked great. Recently, I saw a brass frame 1851 Pietta Colt (Cabelas stamp) with a locked action. When I get it, I start fiddling with leftover parts. The wedge locks the action hard at not quite 100% in so the wedge spring locks. But that is just the first thing I notice. I already own a Pietta in the same exact model, and I use it for comparison.
I pull all the innards, and the hammer nub for the bolt seems worn, one arm of the bolt is broken, and the trigger is worn uneven. With spare worn parts, it won't cycle right, bolt isn't engaging, and cocking takes it past TDC by about halfway to the next nipple. No matter, order all new parts.
In goes the new, and..... total manure. Hand doesn't run smooth, so polish that. When I put the bolt in, it is almost impossible to move to full cock, catching on the hammer nub/lock prior to going full. So I polish the bolt arms to make is smoother. Now it cycles to TDC.
Last but not least, it all seems to run right. Twice. After the second cycle, the bolt stays in the locked position. If I take it apart, force the exposed bolt down with a finger, it clicks and the gun will cycle one time. Then the bolt stays locked. Tried ALL the spare bolt springs I have, they all do the same. I have tried 3 bolts ( 1 used, 1 new from Taylor's, and one was a removal off a new Pietta 1851 Navy pistol.
Anyone have any clue what the ghost in the machine is? It is like playing whackamole.
I pull all the innards, and the hammer nub for the bolt seems worn, one arm of the bolt is broken, and the trigger is worn uneven. With spare worn parts, it won't cycle right, bolt isn't engaging, and cocking takes it past TDC by about halfway to the next nipple. No matter, order all new parts.
In goes the new, and..... total manure. Hand doesn't run smooth, so polish that. When I put the bolt in, it is almost impossible to move to full cock, catching on the hammer nub/lock prior to going full. So I polish the bolt arms to make is smoother. Now it cycles to TDC.
Last but not least, it all seems to run right. Twice. After the second cycle, the bolt stays in the locked position. If I take it apart, force the exposed bolt down with a finger, it clicks and the gun will cycle one time. Then the bolt stays locked. Tried ALL the spare bolt springs I have, they all do the same. I have tried 3 bolts ( 1 used, 1 new from Taylor's, and one was a removal off a new Pietta 1851 Navy pistol.
Anyone have any clue what the ghost in the machine is? It is like playing whackamole.