KOrdway:
I apologize for the short reply earlier about your revolver. I am 68 and my "Total Recall" is far from total these days. I did some digging so as to give you an idea about the extent to which GLB was in involved in the then gun trade. I have a friend on a French site who speaks and posts in excellent American English, but the French terminology for various revolver parts differs significantly from the US terminology: cannon is barrel, barrel is cylinder, carcass is frame, clavette is backstrap, dog is hammer, and so on. I found a thread that my friend posted in 2016 concerning guns manufactured by GLB. I have edited it to include sections pertinent to your interest, and have substituted US terms for the French terms.
I bolded the part that applies to your revolver, FYI.
Please be reminded that parts are not available for this revolver. Your only source would be either modern Uberti or Pietta parts (I use VTI as a parts source). Having said that, Uberti and Pietta have utilized CNC machining for revolver production since ~2002, and prior production revolvers for both utilized sub-contracted parts from those very same obscure Northern Italian manufacturers, so there is a wide variation in tolerances and even the factories at the time hand-fitted these parts to every revolver that came off the assembly line. The parts that will wear/break are the internals: hand/spring, bolt, trigger/bolt spring, and the bolt cam on the side of the hammer. As an aside, I scored a Pietta 1851 Navy (AZ/1990) 4-screw steel frame CFS (cut for stock) for a "nice" price a year ago. When it arrived it did not function, had not been cleaned in years, and some Bubba had modified the bolt head. I cleaned it all up and 6 months later finally found a previously owned bolt on Ebay and it now works flawlessly. I really lucked out as a modern Pietta CNC bolt I had on hand was nowhere near close to fitting, concerning the bolt-hole location and the length of the bolt legs.
I digress. I hope the following info is helpful to you.
Regards,
Jim
Since I've been looking for information about one of the most mysterious replica manufacturers, the one whose brand brings together three letters in one logo: I've finally collected some data that I think is time to share.
First, the identification of this manufacturer. No weapon bears his full name. Therefore, it is essential to cross-reference objective sources in order to formulate a result. Three concurring sources allow me to give (or confirm) this identification:
- 1- the Armi site of Edoardo Mori, which, in its encyclopedia of weapons and manufacturers lists as the only italian manufacturer name corresponding to these initials Giacosa Luciano,
- 2- the book "Pistols of the World" by Ian V. Hogg and John Walter published by Krause Publications, which mentions Luciano Giacosa and Co.
- 3- the book "Cartridges And Firearm Identification" by Robert E. Walker published by CRC Press, which devotes a page to FIE (Firearms Import and Export) in which is specified:
One Italian gunsmith whose name corresponds to the initials, and who also supplied weapons to the two successive American importers who distributed massively. The correspondence can reasonably be found. Luciano Giacosa, a gunsmith in Brescia, can therefore be identified with the owner of the GLB logo.
Second, what types of weapons did it produce? According to the evidence gathered, he made both cartridge weapons and black powder replicas.
Cartridge Weapons
On the one hand, the article in the book "Pistols of the World" already quoted clearly indicates that Giacosa manufactured closed frame revolvers of .32 caliber and .38 caliber for the importer EIG (Saul Eig, Sarasota FL). Evidence of this can be found on the Internet, with images such as those found on this site: Eig Italian revolver - The Firing Line Forums, which show a revolver made in 1965, a copy of a Smith and Wesson bearing the on the frame the mark "EIG" and on the bottom of the backstrap the "GLB" logo.
These two types are the only ones for which it can be said with certainty that Giacosa made them. Insofar as black powder replicas, as evidenced by Dr. Jim Davis's article "Schneider and Glassick - The "Accidental " Replica Revolver" published on his website RPRCA (Replica Percussion Revolver Collector Association, which no longer exists due to the passing of Davis in September 2019), Giacosa provided EIG with replicas of Schneider and Glassick as early as 1963. This model has been available in two forms: a simple, no-frills model, and a "luxury" model, also as early as 1963, with engravings on all metal parts (load lever excepted).
After the demise of EIG, Giacosa continued to supply its successor, FIE (Firearms Import Export), until 1971, and then gave way to Esterina Riva.
With the arrival of FIE on the market, at least four other models of replica handguns have appeared, all historically incorrect, but inexpensive to produce and therefore for sale to American shooters: an 1848 Pocket Model .31 with brass frame and squareback trigger guard with two barrel lengths, and a brass frame 1851 Schneider and Glassick with naval battle engraving on the cylinder .44 caliber, a Remington 1858 Army .44 with a brass frame, and a Remington 1858 Navy .36 with brass frame. For FIE as well, but at a higher cost, GLB has also produced a fully nickeled S&G.
Until 1968, U.S. law did not require manufacturers to trademark weapons. This is why a number of revolvers produced by Giacosa bear only the importer's trademark. In this case, for the S&G, EIG NAVY on the barrel and the EIG logo in a pair of circles on the backstrap heel. The import of weapons, hitherto very unregulated, saw its rules tightened with the passage of the Gun Control Act of 1968, which quickly led to the collapse of companies such as EIG Cutlery. The activity was taken over by FIE, which introduced even cheaper but lower quality weapons, which allowed it to last until the early 1990s.