Dave that is extraordinarily generous of you. I will contact the customer and ask him. I sent him photos and explained the situation and he said there is a gunsmith near him who can fix it. I will contact you as soon as I hear from him regarding your offer to help.Hi Bob,
That mainspring is really wrong. I suspect that it was made from Siler cast parts but not by Chambers, which is not uncommon. The only solution is to heat and bend the spring or get a replacement, preferably from Chambers so you know it will be right. Unless the kit is from Chambers, you have no guarantee the Siler lock was assembled by Chambers. For me, it would be a 5 minute fix with time reserved for heat treating. If you want to send me the lock to me, I'll fix no charge except for cost of shipping.
dave
dave
LOL if it took that long my customer might swat me with the hickory stick! But thanks and I am super happy that you are enjoying this build- I am, tooAll this is so good, learning a lot from this. Can you make this build last until Christmas. JUST KIDDING
No thanks, and the mainspring situation is being resolved and the customer is very satisfied.Here is another opinion I'm sure you don't want to hear...Why don't you take that lock apart and find and fix the problem yourself? Then give it a good polishing before handing it over to your customer? The more you know about locks and how each part works will behoove you. I want my locks to work as slick and fine as possible and that includes mating with the trigger.
I would not think of handing one of my rifles over to a customer without tuning the lock and expecting him to get someone else to fix it.
That's almost like getting a new guitar that won't play.
I have an old worn CVA Mountain rifle that does the same thing to the point the mainspring comes off.I was curious why there was such resistance in drawing to half and full **** after the first lock test. I had a suspission and put some color transfer (lipstick) on the edge of the mainspring and sure enough it was touching against the inside of the mortise. How did I miss this? I looked at the lock and saw the mainspring was creeping outward, better than a 1/16" inch and not resting square on the tumbler! The customer will have a locksmith make the correction when the rifle is completed.
I was a but surprised at this especially since it is a Chambers lock.
(Note that I did not unassemple the lock to inlet it so no error on the builder's end).
Hi DaveHi Bob,
That mainspring is really wrong. I suspect that it was made from Siler cast parts but not by Chambers, which is not uncommon. The only solution is to heat and bend the spring or get a replacement, preferably from Chambers so you know it will be right. Unless the kit is from Chambers, you have no guarantee the Siler lock was assembled by Chambers. For me, it would be a 5 minute fix with time reserved for heat treating. If you want to send me the lock to me, I'll fix no charge except for cost of shipping.
dave
dave
The LC Smith thread exists on another more appropriate forum for those who would care to visit. It is in the Shotgun Forum (not shotgun world) under High End and Specialty Guns--LC Smith Build from Scratch. I have been off it awhile the COVID prevented me from getting any Acraglas for a half year, now I need to get rebooted and going again.Maybe start your own thread?
I had the same problem with a little different guard. It broke at the trigger bow. Had a void in it.I somehow anticipated something like this.
Interestingly, the second trigger guard broke at exactly the same spot as the first one.
I heated the rail of this second trigger guard to a cherry red and thought a little effort would bend it.
But bend even a little it would not.
Heck, with that re-curved front bow it would not be even possible to adjust the angle of the forward flat as needed to fit this stock.
Time to try a new style guard.
Looking at the colors it was not hot enough. Remember get it hot enough and it literally flows so it will get soft enough. Well would haveI somehow anticipated something like this.
Interestingly, the second trigger guard broke at exactly the same spot as the first one.
I heated the rail of this second trigger guard to a cherry red and thought a little effort would bend it.
But bend even a little it would not.
Heck, with that re-curved front bow it would not be even possible to adjust the angle of the forward flat as needed to fit this stock.
Time to try a new style guard.
Beautiful job!I had the same problem with a little different guard. It broke at the trigger bow. Had a void in it.
View attachment 95738
I hand forged a mild piece of steel and made it longer to go from the trigger bow to the back piece, copper riveted it and soldered it in place.
View attachment 95742
Thank you. Maybe you can do a fix like that instead of fighting poor castings...Beautiful job!
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