Howdy folks.
I discovered black spots in my original New Army Model produced June 1864
Previous owner shot a few 35 grain FFFg BP loads in it with 454 roundballs and said the spots are not to be worried about. So one could say it has been pressure tested with high pressure loads considering its age. The cylinder has tiny amounts of pitting but the revolver is in very good shape and is mechanically perfect with little sign of wear otherwise.
What are these dark spots? Is it black rust that i should be worried about with risk of having turned the steel below brittle? Or is it just superficial? I have many old guns and revolvers and have never seen black corrosion before in cylinders.
It cannot be cleaned with oil and a copper brush neither with rust remover soaking. It is not dirt but a type of corrosion.
Can i just keep firing 25 to 30 grain loads in this beauty without concern?
Thank you all in advance
I discovered black spots in my original New Army Model produced June 1864
Previous owner shot a few 35 grain FFFg BP loads in it with 454 roundballs and said the spots are not to be worried about. So one could say it has been pressure tested with high pressure loads considering its age. The cylinder has tiny amounts of pitting but the revolver is in very good shape and is mechanically perfect with little sign of wear otherwise.
What are these dark spots? Is it black rust that i should be worried about with risk of having turned the steel below brittle? Or is it just superficial? I have many old guns and revolvers and have never seen black corrosion before in cylinders.
It cannot be cleaned with oil and a copper brush neither with rust remover soaking. It is not dirt but a type of corrosion.
Can i just keep firing 25 to 30 grain loads in this beauty without concern?
Thank you all in advance