Boom Stick
36 Cl.
- Joined
- Sep 25, 2013
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My son and I just tooK our 58 Remington revolvers out and shot them over the last couple of weekends and I've got to say that we are greatly impressed, surprised, and enamored with them versus our 51 Navies. Our Navies and our Remington Navies are Uberti Manufactured, so same quality - same manufacturing standards.
What we have notice is that the Remington revolvers hold more powder, 23 grains in the 51 Navys vs 30 grains in the Remington Navys, both with excellent accuracy worked up to that level. But with the Remington revolvers after about the third cyliner the caps require hammer strikes on all 6 nipples / caps before the caps will actually fire. Yes, we use a dowel rod to firmly seat each cap before holster the pistol and then moving to the target line to shoot. I've even tried using a stiff military M16 cleaning kit 'tooth brush' to brush off some of the carbon on the nipples to help seat the caps but it doesn't seem to help any.
I'm wondering if we should reduce our charges to 25 grains to help reduce the fouling might help? That would be an option I guess but the accuracy we recorded is much better at 28 grains vs 25 grains, and better still at 30 grains vs 28 grains, and this was for both of our guns. Surprising, but when you record notes with a new gun you cannot go wrong.
The only other thing I can think of to do it to go ahead and pull out the slix shot nipples and install them and see if they will help with reducing the fouling.
Any thought, recommendations?
What we have notice is that the Remington revolvers hold more powder, 23 grains in the 51 Navys vs 30 grains in the Remington Navys, both with excellent accuracy worked up to that level. But with the Remington revolvers after about the third cyliner the caps require hammer strikes on all 6 nipples / caps before the caps will actually fire. Yes, we use a dowel rod to firmly seat each cap before holster the pistol and then moving to the target line to shoot. I've even tried using a stiff military M16 cleaning kit 'tooth brush' to brush off some of the carbon on the nipples to help seat the caps but it doesn't seem to help any.
I'm wondering if we should reduce our charges to 25 grains to help reduce the fouling might help? That would be an option I guess but the accuracy we recorded is much better at 28 grains vs 25 grains, and better still at 30 grains vs 28 grains, and this was for both of our guns. Surprising, but when you record notes with a new gun you cannot go wrong.
The only other thing I can think of to do it to go ahead and pull out the slix shot nipples and install them and see if they will help with reducing the fouling.
Any thought, recommendations?